Minority group members and stigma:
Evans, P. C., & McConnell, A. R. (2003). Do racial minorities respond in the
same way to mainstream beauty standards? Social comparison processes in Asian,
Black, and White women. Self and Identity, 2, 153-167.
Some members of stigmatized groups, such as Asian women, may be more
likely to experience negative self-evaluations after exposure to a mainstream
beauty standard than members of other stigmatized groups, such as Black women.
In this study, 54 Asian women, 52 Black women, and 64 White women, were exposed
to mainstream standards of beauty and compared themselves to these idealized
images. It was hypothesized that although Black women would find these comparisons
irrelevant, Asian women would see these targets as relevant for their comparisons,
reflecting their striving for mainstream beauty standards. The results indicated
that Black women did not find mainstream standards as relevant to themselves
and reported positive self-evaluations generally and about their bodies in particular.
Asian women, on the other hand, responded differently than Black women and were
more likely to endorse mainstream beauty standards in a similar fashion to White
women. As predicted, Asian women also experienced greater dissatisfaction with
their bodies than did Black women.
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