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“That’s just, par for the course”: social class, objectification and body image among white working-class women in the United Kingdom

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posted on 2024-08-27, 11:32 authored by Jamie Chan, Megan HurstMegan Hurst, Matthew EasterbrookMatthew Easterbrook, Eleanor MilesEleanor Miles
Working-class women are disadvantaged by unequal classed and gendered power dynamics, which shape their experiences of objectification and affect their relationship with their bodies. However, existing objectification and body image literature has scarcely examined working-class women’s experiences. Using interpretative phenomenological analysis, the current research contributes to the literature by examining White working-class women’s objectification and appearance-related experiences and sensemaking in the United Kingdom. We conducted semi-structured interviews with ten White heterosexual working-class women (aged between 21 and 35 years) living in England. We found that working-class women understood their positions within society as one where they are inevitably subjected to objectification, harassment and violence (Superordinate Theme 1). Their experiences of being stigmatized also led to feelings of internalized shame (Superordinate Theme 2), which engendered a need for self-protection. As such, working-class women were constantly vigilant over the way they appeared to others (Superordinate Theme 3) to avoid ‘sticking out’ (i.e., being singled out), where becoming ‘unnoticeable’ (Superordinate Theme 4) was a strategy to (visually) fit in. Our findings shed light on White working-class women’s objectification experiences that are underrepresented in existing research. These findings suggest that differential power and control, as reflected by social class, facilitates different constructions of meanings within objectification experiences, which shape women’s body and appearance. Keywords: social class, self-objectification, body image, interpretative phenomenological analysis, working-class women

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Psychology of Women Quarterly

ISSN

0361-6843

Publisher

SAGE

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes