1. Differentiating contributions of self-objectification and self-sexualization to young women’s sexual agency
- Author
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Petal Grower and L. Monique Ward
- Subjects
050103 clinical psychology ,Social Psychology ,Sexual Behavior ,media_common.quotation_subject ,050109 social psychology ,Human sexuality ,Developmental psychology ,law.invention ,Condom ,law ,Agency (sociology) ,Body Image ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Assertiveness ,General Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Sexualization ,Feeling ,Female ,Self-objectification ,Sexual objectification ,Psychology ,Sexuality - Abstract
Findings consistently illustrate the negative association between women’s sexual objectification and their sexual functioning. At the same time, some scholars argue that sexualized self-presentation may be a way to embrace one’s sexuality and may signify empowerment. To date, no studies have explicitly explored the potential differential contributions of self-objectification and self-sexualization to multiple aspects of women’s sexual agency. Towards this end, we surveyed 556 undergraduate women to examine how body surveillance, self-objectification, and self-sexualization differentially predict women’s sexual assertiveness, sexual satisfaction, feelings of entitlement to sexual pleasure, condom use self-efficacy, and sexual esteem. Path analysis demonstrated consistent negative links between body surveillance, one behavioral manifestation of self-objectification, and sexual agency outcomes, but revealed both negative and positive links between measures of sexualization and sexual agency. This complex set of associations highlights the value of studying self-objectification and self-sexualization both in tandem and separately, so that researchers can develop a better understanding of the implications of each for women’s sexual agency.
- Published
- 2021
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