A Test of the Agency Hypothesis in Women’s Cosmetic Surgery Usage

被引:0
|
作者
Shelley Eriksen
Sara Goering
机构
[1] California State University,Department of Human Development
[2] California State University,Department of Sociology
[3] University of Washington,Department of Philosophy
[4] Seattle,undefined
来源
Sex Roles | 2011年 / 64卷
关键词
Cosmetic surgery; Agency; Autonomy; Relationship influences; Gender ideology; Media usage; Self-esteem;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Women’s agency—their ability to make conscious choices and to act on them—is a central consideration in feminist theories of cosmetic surgery. Several key issues in this longstanding debate are how much external or coercive influence women experience (or acknowledge) in their choice to pursue surgery, whether they are aware of sexist ideology more so than non-recipients, and whether their choice to pursue surgery exemplifies a strong sense of self worth. To test this agency hypothesis, we draw on survey data from a volunteer sample of 202 adult women ages 19–86 years from the southern California region in the U.S. to compare cosmetic surgery recipients to non-recipients across these key socio-cultural and personal domains. Results reveal that cosmetic surgery recipients were more likely to have friends who had undergone cosmetic surgery, endorsed more covert sexist beliefs, exhibited greater media usage, and had higher household incomes, than non-recipients. Recipients also evidenced lower ratings in global self-esteem than non-recipients. These findings challenge some of the notions attendant to agency claims, and engage with conceptions of autonomy introduced in the feminist philosophical literature.
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页码:888 / 901
页数:13
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