Body satisfaction and pressure to be thin in younger and older Muslim and non-Muslim women: the role of Western and non-Western dress preferences

Body Image. 2010 Jan;7(1):56-65. doi: 10.1016/j.bodyim.2009.10.003. Epub 2009 Nov 28.

Abstract

Younger and older Muslim and non-Muslim women living in the United States completed questionnaires about body satisfaction and their internalization of Western standards of beauty (thin-ideal). Younger Muslim women wearing non-Western clothing and a head veil were significantly less likely to express drive for thinness or pressure to attain a thin-ideal standard of beauty than women wearing Western dress or younger women wearing non-Western dress without a head veil. Older women, while expressing greater discrepancy between their ideal body shape and their current body shape, and less satisfaction with their bodies than younger women, reported less drive for thinness and less pressure to attain the Western thin-ideal standard of beauty than younger women. These results are discussed in terms of how factors such as age and religion may serve as protective factors against a strong or unhealthy drive for thinness or thin-ideal standard.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Acculturation*
  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Age Factors
  • Aged
  • Beauty
  • Body Image*
  • Christianity / psychology
  • Clothing / psychology*
  • Cross-Cultural Comparison
  • Emigrants and Immigrants / psychology*
  • Female
  • Gender Identity
  • Humans
  • Illinois
  • Iowa
  • Islam / psychology*
  • Jews / psychology
  • Middle Aged
  • Personal Satisfaction*
  • Religion and Psychology*
  • Social Conformity*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Thinness / ethnology*
  • Thinness / psychology
  • Young Adult