| Literature DB >> 21475650 |
Eileen L Zurbriggen, Laura R Ramsey, Beth K Jaworski.
Abstract
Few studies have examined objectification in the context of romantic relationships, even though strong theoretical arguments have often made this connection. This study addresses this gap in the literature by examining whether exposure to mass media is related to self-objectification and objectification of one's partner, which in turn is hypothesized to be related to relationship and sexual satisfaction. A sample of undergraduate students (91 women and 68 men) enrolled in a university on the west coast of the United States completed self-report measures of the following variables: self-objectification, objectification of one's romantic partner, relationship satisfaction, sexual satisfaction, and exposure to objectifying media. Men reported higher levels of partner objectification than did women; there was no gender difference in self-objectification. Self- and partner-objectification were positively correlated; this correlation was especially strong for men. In regression analyses, partner-objectification was predictive of lower levels of relationship satisfaction. Furthermore, a path model revealed that consuming objectifying media is related to lowered relationship satisfaction through the variable of partner-objectification. Finally, self- and partner-objectification were related to lower levels of sexual satisfaction among men. This study provides evidence for the negative effects of objectification in the context of romantic relationships among young adults.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21475650 PMCID: PMC3062032 DOI: 10.1007/s11199-011-9933-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sex Roles ISSN: 0360-0025
Fig. 1Path diagram showing hypothesized relationships predicting relationship satisfaction
Levels of objectification in genres of television, film, and magazines
| Television genre | Mean (SD) | Film genre | Mean (SD) | Magazine genre | Mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erotic/Adult | 25.00 (0) | X-rated | 25.00 (0) | Men’s Erotic Entertainment | 24.22 (1.82) |
| Music Video Channels | 22.56 (4.79) | Erotic/Adult | 23.48 (2.86) | Men’s Entertainment | 23.24 (2.92) |
| Reality Dating | 19.95 (4.41) | Horror/Thriller | 20.12 (5.23) | Women’s Style and Fashion | 15.72 (6.49) |
| Confrontational Talk Shows | 16.40 (5.58) | Adventure/Action | 18.27 (4.61) | Sports | 15.04 (6.17) |
| Wrestling | 13.83 (4.94) | Comedy | 12.62 (4.75) | Men’s Style and Fashion | 12.67 (6.43) |
| Comedy | 12.45 (3.88) | Westerns | 10.38 (5.60) | Women’s Erotic Entertainment | 12.31 (7.00) |
| Drama | 11.58 (4.38) | Romantic Comedy | 8.93 (3.59) | Health and Fitness | 12.00 (7.10) |
| Daytime Soap Operas | 11.55 (6.72) | Superhero Comic/ Cartoon | 8.18 (3.06) | News and Current Events | 4.64 (1.79) |
| Cartoons | 9.93 (5.00) | Drama | 6.86 (3.41) | ||
| Late Night Talk Shows | 7.64 (2.82) | Science Fiction | 6.32 (2.49) | ||
| Sitcoms | 7.22 (2.98) | ||||
| Sports | 5.83 (2.50) | ||||
| News | 4.57 (2.30) | ||||
| Political Programming | 3.48 (2.41) | ||||
| Traditional Daytime Talk Shows | 3.41 (2.12) | ||||
| Public Television | 1.16 (.45) |
Experts were asked to rate the intensity and frequency of objectification in these media genres on a 5-pt. scale. Each expert’s intensity and frequency ratings for each genre were multiplied, so the possible range became 1–25, with higher scores representing more frequent and intense objectification. The means and standard deviations above were weighted to take into account the expert’s familiarity with that particular genre.
Descriptive statistics and gender differences
| Women ( | Men ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consumption of objectifying media | 172.07 (192.97) | 204.89 (177.43) | −1.098 |
| Consumption of objectifying media (log transformation) | 4.74 (.89) | 4.97 (.89) | −1.610 |
| Self-objectification | 4.65 (1.07) | 4.61 (1.04) | .267 |
| Partner-objectification | 3.13 (.82) | 3.98 (.87) | −6.308*** |
| Relationship satisfaction | 3.86 (.93) | 3.45 (.89) | 2.851** |
See text for information on calculating the consumption of objectifying media variable. The self- and partner-objectification measures are on a 1-to-7 scale, whereas the relationship satisfaction measure is on a 1-to-5 scale. Higher scores on all measures indicate higher levels of the construct
** p < .01, *** p < .001
Zero-order correlations between variables
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Gender (women = 1, men = 2) | – | ||||
| 2. Consumption of objectifying media (log transformation) | .127 | – | |||
| 3. Self-objectification | −.021 | .055 | – | ||
| 4. Partner-objectification | .450*** | .193* | .295*** | – | |
| 5. Relationship satisfaction | −.222** | −.141# | −.169* | −.379*** | – |
# p < .10, * p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001
Unstandardized partial coefficients (B’s), standard errors, and standardized partial coefficients (β’s) for simultaneous regression predicting relationship satisfaction (n = 159)
|
| SE( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender (0 = women; 1 = men) | −.013 | .143 | −.007 |
| Relationship status (0 = not in relationship; 1 = in relationship) | .840 | .130 | .452*** |
| Self-objectification | −.064 | .067 | −.069 |
| Partner-objectification | −.218 | .075 | −.234** |
| Media consumption | −.037 | .067 | −.040 |
| Self-objectification*Partner-objectification | .017 | .070 | .017 |
| Self-objectification*Media consumption | .069 | .091 | .054 |
| Partner-objectification*Media consumption | −.106 | .069 | −.111 |
| Self-objectification*Partner-objectification*Media consumption | .033 | .092 | .026 |
# p < .10, * p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001
Fig. 2Final path model predicting relationship satisfaction. Note: Error terms for self- and partner-objectification were allowed to correlate in order to model shared method variance. Paths in bold have coefficients that differ from zero, p < .05. Solid paths have coefficients that differ from zero, p < .10. Dashed paths have coefficients that do not differ reliably from zero, p > .10. Fit statistics: χ2(2) = .96, p = .62; CFI = 1.00, NFI = .99, RMSEA = .00 (90% CI: .000, .127)
Standardized partial coefficients (β’s) for simultaneous regressions predicting sexual satisfaction, separately by gender
| Men ( | Women | |
|---|---|---|
| Self-objectification | −.400# | −.079 |
| Partner-objectification | −.203 | −.124 |
| Total | .297** | .027 |
Only participants currently in a committed dating relationship responded to the sexual satisfaction item
# p < .10, ** p < .01