학술논문

Body Dissatisfaction and Disordered Eating Among Early Adolescents From Korea and the US.
Document Type
Article
Source
Sex Roles; July 2009, Vol. 61 Issue 1/2, p42-54, 13p
Subject
Cross-cultural studies
Eating disorders
Youth
Body image
Teenagers
Self-perception
Eating disorders in adolescence
Teenage boys
Teenage girls
Koreans
Adolescent psychology
Women college students
Sociocultural factors
Cross-cultural differences
Eating disorders in children
Body size
United States
South Korea
Language
ISSN
03600025
Abstract
Multidimensional measures of body dissatisfaction and disordered eating were studied in samples of 12–15 years old middle school children. Consistent with feminist theories associating body dissatisfaction with rapid social change, Korean girls ( n = 272) exhibited the greatest body dissatisfaction and the most behaviors associated with disordered eating and were followed in order by Korean boys ( n = 276), US girls ( n = 251), and US boys ( n = 220). The results, which replicated Jung and Forbes () report of greater body dissatisfaction among Korean than among US college women, suggest that (1) these differences originate prior to adolescence, and (2) the sociocultural variables producing greater body dissatisfaction in Korean girls and women also influence body dissatisfaction among boys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]