Debenhams, H&M, and Marks & Spencer are the most popular shopping destinations for women aged 20 and 45. A survey carried out for Vogue magazine by Taylor Nelson Sofres revealed that 92 per cent of the 2,500 women questioned shopped for clothes at department stores, with 70 per cent regularly visiting Debenhams, followed by House of Fraser at 62 per cent and John Lewis at 56 per cent.
An increasing number of studies shows that exposure to thin ideal bodies in the media has negative effects on young women's body images, at least in the short-term. However, this research has (a) consistently confounded the effects of thinness and attractiveness, and (b) not investigated the potential use of alternative images in advertising that do not decrease women's body esteem. This study examines the impact of three types of advertisements—featuring thin models, average-size models, or no models—on adult women's body-focused anxiety, and on advertising effectiveness. As expected, exposure to thin models resulted in greater body-focused anxiety among women who internalize the thin ideal than exposure to average-size models or no models. Yet, advertisements were equally effective, regardless of the model's size. This implies that advertisers can successfully use larger, but attractive, models and perhaps avoid increasing body-focused anxiety in a large proportion of women.
Author(s): Emma Halliwell 1 Helga Dittmar 2
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Thursday, February 14, 2008
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