1998
DOI: 10.1080/00224549809600409
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Cultural Variations in Body Esteem: How Young Adults in Iran and the United States View Their Own Appearances

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Cited by 30 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…In a particular study, female and male Iranian college students were compared with their American counterparts. As expected, the Iranian female students scored considerably higher www.intechopen.com than the U.S. participants when asked to assess their body-esteem, while men, from both countries, scored higher than the women (Akiba, 1998). These results suggest that the current access to Western mass media has had a more significant impact amongst the female population.…”
Section: Homogenisation Processes Of the Body Ideal Regarding Physicasupporting
confidence: 60%
“…In a particular study, female and male Iranian college students were compared with their American counterparts. As expected, the Iranian female students scored considerably higher www.intechopen.com than the U.S. participants when asked to assess their body-esteem, while men, from both countries, scored higher than the women (Akiba, 1998). These results suggest that the current access to Western mass media has had a more significant impact amongst the female population.…”
Section: Homogenisation Processes Of the Body Ideal Regarding Physicasupporting
confidence: 60%
“…He attributed his results to the availability of 'body-conscious' Western media that people in the United States are exposed to, whereas in Iran (at least at the time of the study), such media was completely kept out (Akiba, 1998). Similarly, the authors of another cross-cultural comparison, a study showing that US males were more dissatisfied with their muscularity than Ukrainian and Ghanaian males, argued that the exposure to Western media and the stringent Western beauty ideals may put people at higher risk for developing body dissatisfaction (Frederick, Buchanan, Sadehgi-Azar, Peplau, Haselton, & Berezovskaya, 2007a;Frederick, Forbes, Grigorian, & Jarcho, 2007b).…”
Section: Cultural Differences In Body Dissatisfactionmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Akiba (1998) examined the body image of Iranians living in Iran, a culture that has outlawed the influx of Western media since the Islamic revolution of 1978. Iranian women in the sample had more positive views of their bodies than a comparison sample of American women, although women in both samples had less positive views of their bodies than men in both samples.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%