English research

Hi there i have 4 pages research project( Dosen’t include the titel and refrence pages)

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in attachment i uplode the sources to use for that.

 

Subject : What are the causes and effects of stereotyping in our current culture (US culture)? 

  

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Evictions at Sorority Raise Issue of Bias
Dillon, Sam
New York Times (1923-Current file); Feb 25, 2007;
ProQuest Historical Newspapers: The New York Times (1851-2009)
pg. 17

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  • Indian mascots — you’re out
  • Author: Shakely, Jack
    Publication info: Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles, Calif] 25 Aug 2011: A.15.
    ProQuest document link
    Abstract: There are many things in this country that are subject to majority rule; dignity and respect are not
    among them. […] it is dignity and respect we are talking about. Since the creation of the National Coalition on
    Racism in Sports and Media in 1991, that group of Native American organizations has been protesting negative
    portrayals of Indians, hammering away at what’s behind our discomfort with Indian sports mascots.
    Links: Base URL to 360 Link:, Click here to order Full Text from OCLC ILLiad, First Search Authorization
    Full text: I got my first lesson in Indians portrayed as sports team mascots in the early 1950s when my father
    took me to a Cleveland Indians-New York Yankees game. Dad gave me money to buy a baseball cap, and I
    was conflicted. I loved the Yankees, primarily because fellow Oklahoman Mickey Mantle had just come up and
    was being touted as rookie of the year. But being mixed-blood Muscogee/Creek, I felt a (misplaced) loyalty to
    the Indians. So I bought the Cleveland cap with the famous Chief Wahoo logo on it.
    When we got back to Oklahoma, my mother took one look at the cap with its leering, big-nosed, buck-toothed
    redskin caricature just above the brim, jerked it off my head and threw it in the trash. She had been fighting
    against Indian stereotypes all her life, and I had just worn one home. I was only 10 years old, but the look of
    betrayal in my Creek mother’s eyes is seared in my memory forever.
    So maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised when half a century later, a Los Angeles Times editorial about
    legislators in North Dakota struggling over whether the University of North Dakota should be forced to change
    its team name and mascot from the Fighting Sioux provoked such a strong reaction. It was an irritant, like a
    long-forgotten piece of shrapnel working its way to the surface.
    Most stories about sports teams and their ethnic mascots are treated like tempests in a teacup. The Times’
    editorial writer, however, while noting that the solons probably had better things to do, understood the sensitivity
    and pain that can accompany such a seemingly trivial subject. It is a small matter, perhaps, but far from trivial.
    Many of the fights over team names and mascots cover familiar territory. Usually the team name in question has
    been around so long as to lose a good bit of its meaning. The University of Illinois’ Fighting Illini, for example,
    refers to an Indian nation, but now that its Chief Illiniwek mascot has been abandoned, few people make the
    connection. Nor do they think twice about what the Atlanta Braves or Edmonton Eskimos or Florida State
    Seminoles represent other than sports franchises. But that doesn’t necessarily make the brands benign. And
    the irony that the football team in our nation’s capital is called the Redskins is not lost on a single Native
    American.
    The controversy over changing ethnocentric mascot names is not a simple matter of stodgy white alums holding
    onto college memories. Indians, too, are conflicted. In a 2002 study on the subject, Sports Illustrated reported
    that 84% of Native Americans polled had no problem with Indian team names or mascots. Although the
    methods used by the magazine to reach these figures were later criticized, that misses the point. If 16% of a
    population finds something offensive, that should be enough to signal deep concern. There are many things in
    this country that are subject to majority rule; dignity and respect are not among them.
    And it is dignity and respect we are talking about. Since the creation of the National Coalition on Racism in
    Sports and Media in 1991, that group of Native American organizations has been protesting negative portrayals
    of Indians, hammering away at what’s behind our discomfort with Indian sports mascots. Many of these mascots
    — maybe most of them — act like fools or savage cutthroats.

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    When I went to an Atlanta Braves game in the 1970s, the Braves name wasn’t the biggest problem. It was that
    cringe-worthy Chief Noc-A-Homa who came stomping and war-dancing his way out of a tepee in center field
    every time the Braves hit a home run that got to me. He was dressed in a Plains Indian chief’s eagle bonnet and
    acted like a village idiot. To their credit, the Braves retired Chief Noc-A-Homa and his girlfriend Princess Win-A-
    Lot in 1983, amid assertions by the Brave’s home office that the protesters were over-dramatizing the issue.
    Few people complain about Florida State University calling itself the Seminoles. But its war-painted and lance-
    threatening mascot Chief Osceola is intended to be menacing, and that’s the take-away many children will
    have. Such casual stereotyping can breed callousness. In the “only good Indian” category, in 1999 the New
    York Post entitled an editorial about the pending New York-Cleveland baseball playoffs, “Take the Tribe and
    Scalp ‘Em.”
    It isn’t easy or inexpensive to remove ethnic and racial stereotypes from college and professional sports. When
    Stanford University changed from the Indians to the Cardinal in 1972, recriminations were bitter. Richard
    Lyman, a friend of mine, was president of Stanford at the time. He said the university lost millions of alumni
    dollars in the short run, but it was the right thing to do.
    In 21st century America, to name a sports team after an African American, Asian or any other ethnic group is
    unthinkable. So why are Native Americans still fair game? As benign as monikers like Fighting Sioux and
    Redskins or mascots like Chief Osceola may seem, they should take their place with the Pekin, Ill., Chinks and
    the Atlanta Black Crackers in the dust bin of history. It is the right thing to do.
    Credit: Jack Shakely is president emeritus of the California Community Foundation and former chair of the Los
    Angeles City/County Native American Indian Commission.
    Subject: Colleges & universities; Mascots; Native North Americans;
    Location: United States–US, North Dakota
    Company / organization: Name: University of North Dakota; NAICS: 611310;
    Publication title: Los Angeles Times
    Pages: A.15
    Publication year: 2011
    Publication date: Aug 25, 2011
    Year: 2011
    Section: Main News; Part A; Editorial Desk
    Publisher: Tribune Publishing Company LLC
    Place of publication: Los Angeles, Calif.
    Country of publication: United States
    ISSN: 04583035
    Source type: Newspapers
    Language of publication: English
    Document type: Commentary
    ProQuest document ID: 885036807
    Document URL:
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    Copyright: (Copyright (c) 2011 Los Angeles Times)
    Last updated: 2011-09-26
    Database: ProQuest Central

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      Indian mascots — you’re out

    ANNE E. BECKER

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI:
    NEGOTIATING BODY IMAGE AND IDENTITY

    DURING RAPID SOCIAL CHANGE

    ABSTRACT. Although the relationship between media exposure and risk behavior among
    youth is established at a population level, the specific psychological and social mecha-
    nisms mediating the adverse effects of media on youth remain poorly understood. This
    study reports on an investigation of the impact of the introduction of television to a rural
    community in Western Fiji on adolescent ethnic Fijian girls in a setting of rapid social
    and economic change. Narrative data were collected from 30 purposively selected ethnic
    Fijian secondary school girls via semi-structured, open-ended interviews. Interviews were
    conducted in 1998, 3 years after television was first broadcast to this region of Fiji. Nar-
    rative data were analyzed for content relating to response to television and mechanisms
    that mediate self and body image in Fijian adolescents. Data in this sample suggest that
    media imagery is used in both creative and destructive ways by adolescent Fijian girls
    to navigate opportunities and conflicts posed by the rapidly changing social environment.
    Study respondents indicated their explicit modeling of the perceived positive attributes of
    characters presented in television dramas, but also the beginnings of weight and body shape
    preoccupation, purging behavior to control weight, and body disparagement. Response to
    television appeared to be shaped by a desire for competitive social positioning during a
    period of rapid social transition. Understanding vulnerability to images and values imported
    with media will be critical to preventing disordered eating and, potentially, other youth risk
    behaviors in this population, as well as other populations at risk.

    KEY WORDS: body image, eating disorders, Fiji, modernization

    INTRODUCTION

    Eating disorders—once more prevalent in postindustrialized and Westernized
    societies—now have global distribution. Moreover, population studies demon-
    strate that transnational migration, modernization, and urbanization are associated
    with elevated risk of disordered eating among girls and young women (Anderson-
    Fye and Becker 2004). Despite advances in treatment, up to 50% of individuals
    with eating disorders do not recover fully (Keel and Mitchell 1997). Similarly,
    primary prevention programs have not yet yielded strategies for achieving sus-
    tained behavioral change in young women that would protect them from an eating
    disorder. This is undoubtedly tied to the complex and multitiered ways in which
    the social environment underpins the values and behaviors that contribute to risk.
    On the other hand, there has been great interest in how media imagery may be one
    means by which sociocultural context impacts risk. To this end, a more nuanced
    understanding of the pernicious nature of the impact of media exposure and its

    Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 28: 533–559, 2004.
    ©C 2004 Springer Science+Business Media, Inc.
    DOI: 10.1007/s11013-004-1067-5

    534 A.E. BECKER

    integration into adolescent and young adult identity is a critical intermediary step
    in developing effective therapeutic and preventive strategies for eating disorders
    across diverse populations.

    The present study examines the impact of the introduction of television on
    ethnic Fijian adolescent girls’ identity and body image in rural Fiji through nar-
    rative data collected from 30 schoolgirls in 1998, 3 years after the introduction of
    television to their community. A previously described cross-sectional, two-wave
    study demonstrated a dramatic increase in indicators of disordered eating during
    the 3 years following the introduction of broadcast television with Western pro-
    gramming to this community, a period which was also a time of rapid social and
    economic transition (Becker et al. 2002).

    Media, teens, identity, and risk

    Exposure to media imagery is known to affect adolescents and young adults
    profoundly; indeed, this principle is the foundation for billions of dollars invest-
    ment in marketing products to these demographic groups. Part of the success
    of marketing to youth lies in stimulating a desire to develop—and project—
    a particular identity. A remunerative strategy for marketing health, beauty, and
    fashion products, for example, is to create an awareness of a “gap” between
    the consumer and the ideal, and then to promise (and sell) the solution in a
    product (O’Connor 2000; see also Mazzarella 2003). This strategy has become
    especially powerful against the backdrop of the American ethos and predilec-
    tion for reshaping and cultivating the body (Becker 1995; Becker and Hamburg
    1996). Whereas the producers of such media imagery and messages have ar-
    gued that their products are meant as “entertainment,” vulnerable individuals
    unequivocally incur unintended serious adverse consequences through exposure
    to these images. Examples of this include the routine and gratuitous violence
    depicted in film, television, and music, and their amply documented effects
    on children (Black and Newman 1995). In addition, a growing literature sug-
    gests that media exposure has adverse effects on body image for some young
    women.

    The complex ways in which American adolescent girls and young women
    embrace or resist media imagery and creatively use other cultural resources to
    construct their social identities are not well understood. The published medical
    literature on media and body image, with few exceptions (Becker et al. 2002;
    Richins 1991), is based on quantitative survey data. Moreover, and also with few
    exceptions (e.g., Rubin et al. 2003), there are almost no data available on the impact
    of media exposure on how girls and young women of diverse ethnic and cultural
    backgrounds construct and represent their identities. Finally, because American
    youth generally have had chronic and unremitting exposure to media imagery by

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 535

    adolescence, conventional quantitative methodology has been unable to unpack
    the complex ways in which media imagery permeates identity in Western contexts.

    For American youth, a distinctively postmodern ideology supports the notion
    that identity is created and achieved, as opposed to fixed and given. The resources
    for developing such an identity have increasingly shifted to extrafamilial sources,
    such as peer groups and media imagery. Moreover, the means of projecting per-
    sonal identity have gradually shifted from mind and character to an increasingly
    visual and consumeristic focus (Lasch 1979). Indeed, young women (and likely
    young men) learn at an early age that identity can be projected through visual
    props and thus manipulated in a variety of ways, so that identity representation
    is more likely to be directed at “seeming” rather than “being” (Bourdieu 1984).
    Clinical experience suggests that young women may be especially vulnerable to
    the illusion that the self can be reshaped and remade. Unfortunately, the conse-
    quences of this culturally sanctioned illusion include body and self-disparagement,
    poor self-esteem, and the demoralization of women (Becker and Hamburg 1996).
    Moreover, there may be a serious adverse impact on mental and physical health,
    potentially resulting in risk-taking behavior (Klein et al. 1993) and eating disorder
    symptoms.

    Identity, body image, and consumer culture

    Consumer culture and media imagery have a pervasive and powerful influence on
    girls at a critical developmental stage; American girls are socialized to cement and
    signal identity through visual symbols that include visible consumption of prestige
    goods or a particular body presentation that conforms to cultural aesthetic ideals.
    The concept of identity used here is not a developmental one, but rather follows
    the social constructionist conceptualization of identity being “something that has
    to be routinely created and sustained in the reflexive activities of the individual”
    (Giddens 1991). Put another way, identity in this sense is “co-constructed” by the
    local social world in such a way that individuals draw heavily on cultural resources
    and symbols to construct, understand, and represent who they are (McKinley
    1997). The project of defining and depicting an identity in contemporary Western
    culture has increasingly centered on a visual focus that depends on the use of
    material props. This, in turn, provides much of the standard fuel driving consumer
    culture, wherein status is conflated with possessing and displaying prestige goods
    (Featherstone 1991). The Western, postmodern “self-identity” is then arguably
    very much constructed as a process of competitively positioning oneself through
    the savvy manipulation of cultural symbols—e.g., by displaying consumption
    of material goods or inscribing or adorning the body in culturally salient ways.
    Examples of this span many ages and include the increasing use of tattooing and
    body-piercing as markers of personal identity (Sweetman 2000) and the 1980s and

    536 A.E. BECKER

    1990s phenomenon of constructing a professional self through “power dressing”
    (Entwhistle 1997).

    There are several reasons to believe that adolescence places girls at particu-
    lar risk as participants in consumer culture. For instance, many have suggested
    that adolescence is a time when American girls are challenged by simultaneous
    conflicting cultural demands to maintain both a trajectory of achievement and the
    requirements of female roles; such conflict, if severe and unresolved, may mani-
    fest in a variety of difficulties, including an eating disorder (Gordon 2000; Pipher
    1994). When girls entering adolescence experience the prevailing cultural pressure
    to please and to seem (Pipher 1994), they look to the media as a guide to their
    self-presentation. In distinction to societies in which status is overtly ascribed,
    the freewheeling license to create and/or remake the self is especially appealing
    within the American frame of opportunity and achievement. The popular illu-
    sion of equal economic and social opportunity has attached itself to the culturally
    peculiar notion of the body’s plasticity as well. That is, girls are socialized to
    believe that they can reconfigure their bodies (with enough “hard work”) in ways
    that invariably lead to disappointment and all too often, self-loathing (Becker and
    Hamburg 1996).

    Media exposure and risk for violent and risky behaviors

    The association between media exposure and violence is unequivocal. Numerous
    studies have documented the relationship between violence viewed on television
    and aggressive behavior (Paik and Comstock 1994; Wood and Wong 1991), which
    may have socially hazardous (Centerwall 1992) as well as psychologically harm-
    ful consequences. This impact on children is believed to be mediated in part by
    imitation of what is depicted on television (Black and Newman 1995). In addi-
    tion, substantial evidence links television viewing (as well as radio, movies, music
    videos) to adolescent engagement in risky behaviors (e.g., sexual activity, alco-
    hol use, cannabis use, and tobacco use) (Altman et al. 1996; Anonymous 1995;
    Centerwall 1992). Similarly, the mechanism by which media encourage risky be-
    haviors is thought to be the provision of “culturally normative behavioral models”
    that justify the behaviors (Klein et al. 1993).

    Media exposure and risk for disordered eating and poor body image

    Media exposure has also been implicated in enhancing risk for the development of
    an eating disorder, although this has received far less attention in the pediatric and
    public health literature. Much of the literature and theory on how cultural context
    promotes risk for disordered eating and poor body image has emphasized how so-
    cial pressures to be thin (generated and sustained in large part via media imagery)
    are internalized and thereby contribute to body dissatisfaction and, ultimately,

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 537

    disordered eating in vulnerable individuals (Garner et al. 1980; Stice et al. 1996;
    Striegel-Moore et al. 1986). One means by which exposure to idealized images
    of beauty has an impact on body image is through stimulating social compari-
    son (Festinger 1954) and body dissatisfaction (Heinberg and Thompson 1992).
    Indeed, numerous observational and experimental studies have demonstrated an
    association between reported media exposure and changes in body image (e.g.,
    Abramson and Valene 1991; Field et al. 1999; Harrison and Cantor 1997; Irving
    1990; Richins 1991; Stice and Shaw 1994; Tiggemann and Pickering 1996). How-
    ever, there is little understanding of what renders media images so compelling a
    model for vulnerable individuals (Becker and Hamburg 1996), and the actual ways
    girls experience and use media images (and the ultimate impact on body image
    and dissatisfaction or disordered eating) are not yet sufficiently well understood
    for potentially effective interventions to be developed. Finally, the ways in which
    girls and women might respond to media images and media-promulgated values in
    diverse social contexts are inadequately understood. However, Western-identified
    images and products may be especially powerful in non-Western contexts precisely
    because of their perceived “exclusivity” (Mazzarella 2003).

    METHODS

    Study design and data collection

    The impact of television exposure and social transition on body image and so-
    cial identity among ethnic Fijian schoolgirls was investigated with open-ended,
    semi-structured interviews via a cross-sectional design. A sample of 30 subjects
    was purposively selected (for maximal variety) from a study population of 65 self-
    identified ethnic Fijian adolescent girls enrolled in forms five through seven (mean
    age 16.9 years) in two secondary schools in Nadroga, Fiji, from July to August
    of 1998. Nadroga is a province in Western Viti Levu, the largest island of the Fiji
    group. The schools are both located within a 15–20 minute drive from a town with
    a population of approximately 8000, and also include boarders from more rural ar-
    eas. This cohort of schoolgirls had already been recruited for the second wave of a
    two-wave cohort study assessing the impact of television exposure on disordered
    eating attitudes and behaviors in Nadroga, Fiji, after they had been exposed to
    television for 3 years. Specific research questions centered on whether (and how)
    exposure to Western television in the context of concomitant rapid social and
    economic transition has stimulated changes in body image and disordered eating
    despite local cultural practices that have traditionally supported robust appetites
    and body shapes. Interviews were conducted in English (the formal language
    of instruction since the third grade) by an American research assistant experi-
    enced in assessing disordered eating symptoms and facilitated by a Fijian research

    538 A.E. BECKER

    assistant from the Nadroga area. Written assent was obtained from subjects and
    a written informed consent obtained from a corresponding parent or guardian.
    Interviews were audiotaped, subsequently transcribed, and analyzed to extract il-
    lustrations of the ways identity and body image were being shaped by television
    viewing as well as ways in which girls appeared to be integrating images, ideas, and
    values introduced by television into their strategies for managing social change.
    The research was approved by both the Harvard Medical School Committee for
    the Protection of Human Subjects and the Fiji Research Committee.

    Study site

    Fiji is an archipelago of over 300 islands on the geographic and cultural border of
    Melanesia and Polynesia. Slightly greater than half of the population (393,000)
    is of ethnic Fijian (indigenous Pacific Islander) origin. Fiji was selected as a
    study site because of the recent (1995) introduction of television to this relatively
    media-naı̈ve population. Moreover, a variety of traditional cultural norms and so-
    cial mechanisms strongly support robust appetites and body shapes in the ethnic
    Fijian population. For instance, the importance of food presentation and feasts as
    facilitators of social exchange and networks supports consumption of relatively
    calorie-dense foods. Even routine meals are accompanied by somewhat extraor-
    dinary efforts by hosts or family to encourage appetites, including a noteworthy
    frequency of pro forma and quite genuine entreaties to eat heartily (e.g., “kana,
    mo urouro,” or, “eat, so you will become fat”) (Becker 1995). In addition, similar
    to other Pacific Island populations (Gill et al. 2002; Pollock 1995), robust bodies
    were traditionally considered aesthetically pleasing. In Fiji, this was in part be-
    cause a large body reflected both the capability for hard work and also indexed
    care and nurturing from a dense social network (Becker 1994).

    Finally, there is no indigenous illness category in Fiji corresponding to any
    eating disorder described in the DSM-IV. Moreover, prior to the 1990s, anorexia
    and bulimia nervosa were thought to be rare or nonexistent among ethnic Fijians
    (Becker 1995), However, two locally defined syndromes among the indigenous
    population, macake (a syndrome chiefly characterized by appetite loss) and ‘go-
    ing thin’—both without a Western nosologic correlate—reflect an enormous social
    concern with appetite and a fear of weight loss. Thus, in contrast to societies in
    which pressures to slim are perceived to be an important context for disordered
    eating behavior, Fijian girls have not conventionally been motivated to reshape
    their bodies through diet or exercise (Becker 1995; Becker and Hamburg 1996).
    Possibly more protective against eating disorders than the absence of social pres-
    sure to be thin in Fiji was the fact that Fijians traditionally were not motivated to
    reshape their bodies. That is, whereas they expressed admiration for the aesthetic
    appeal of certain body features (most notably, large calves and a body that is jubu

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 539

    vina, or robust), they did not typically express interest in nor focus efforts toward
    attaining the culturally ideal shape (Becker 1995; Becker and Hamburg 1996).

    Notwithstanding this traditional context, previously reported data from a cross-
    sectional, two-wave cohort study demonstrated an increase in disordered eating
    attitudes and behaviors among ethnic Fijian schoolgirls between 1995 (when
    television was introduced) and 1998 (Becker et al. 2002). Analysis of the narrative
    data from this study revealed that a majority of study subjects felt that television
    had influenced attitudes toward body shape and weight in this peer group. Many
    subjects explicitly indicated a desire to emulate television characters; for some
    individuals, this appeared to be related to the perception that career goals could
    be enhanced by this route (Becker et al. 2002). This was a somewhat unexpected
    finding, given the traditional Fijian disinterest in personal investment in reshaping
    the body. Hence, the present study seeks to explore in greater detail the ways in
    which the girls responded to television in the context of rapid economic and social
    change in Fiji through a secondary data analysis.

    The observed changes likely have many antecedents, which include concrete and
    ideological ramifications of modernization throughout the Pacific. For example,
    obesity is becoming increasingly prevalent across Pacific populations (Gill et al.
    2002). In Fiji, this is in part likely due to increased consumption of processed
    foods (National Food and Nutrition Centre 2001) and availability of motorized
    transportation. As obesity has begun to be identified as a serious public health
    issue in Fiji and throughout the Pacific, new attention has been drawn to medical
    risks associated with overweight and personal responsibility for controlling it
    (Snowden and Schultz 2001). This indeed may have influenced the shift away
    from a relatively passive and self-accepting stance toward body shape (Becker
    et al. in press.).

    The partial electrification of rural Fiji that began in the mid-1980s has been
    accompanied by relatively rapid economic, political, and social changes. For ex-
    ample, as a cash economy has gradually replaced the preexisting subsistence
    agriculture economy (with extended families growing the root crops that are
    the dietary staple), there has been increasing pressure for youth to find wage-
    earning jobs, in distinction to the recent past, when the expectation was that
    youth would either be engaged in domestic duties and/or work on the family
    plantation. With increasing opportunities for wage-earning and the stimulation
    of consumerism by advertising and other exposure to Western lifestyles through
    television, the acquisition of prestige consumer goods (mostly electric appliances
    such as refrigerators, television sets, and radios) is now becoming more pos-
    sible and common in Fiji. With the traditional economy fairly dependent on
    informal and formal distribution of resources, the current generation finds it-
    self without consumer-experienced role models for navigating this new social
    environment.

    540 A.E. BECKER

    RESULTS

    Televised imagery appears to have engaged the imagination of Fijian youth at mul-
    tiple levels, apparently operating synergistically with the sweeping and rapid social
    changes taking place in Fiji over the past two decades. The ensuing changes in self
    and body image were multifaceted. On the most superficial and concrete level, tele-
    vision appeared to redefine local aesthetic ideals for bodily appearance and presen-
    tation. Television scenarios also appeared to stimulate desire to acquire elements
    of the lifestyles portrayed, including the body shape perceived to be best suited for
    obtaining a job. Subjects explicitly reported modeling behavior and appearance on
    television characters. Indeed, role modeling of television characters appeared to
    conflate moral virtues, success in job opportunities, and appearance. On a subtle
    but palpable level, study subjects indicated that television characters, appearances,
    and values portrayed on television provided an anchor for identity as well as com-
    petitive social positioning in a rapidly evolving social landscape. For some of the
    subjects, the newly introduced pressures to reshape their bodies and compete for
    employment appear to have fostered disordered eating. Excerpted interview data
    that follow illustrate major themes concerning subjects’ responses to television.

    Redefinition of body ideals and development of an ethos of body cultivation

    “I see the ads in the television, and I admire their fitness, their sizes.”(S-61)1

    “[N]owadays we watch TV, and some creams [are advertised . . . ].
    We can change, change our body.”(S-16)

    Frequent comments admiring the appearance of television characters centered
    on their thinness and their apparel (see Becker et al. 2002). Especially striking were
    the comments that reflected the girls’ motivation to reshape their bodies and the
    acceptance that individuals have the ability to pursue this—not at all indigenous
    concepts. Specifically, the notion of increasing physical activity for weight control
    was linked to television commercials advertising exercise equipment. In addition,
    the concept of modifying diet gained unprecedented popularity in this community.
    These changes are particularly notable given the stability of previous traditions
    concerning bodily aesthetics (Becker 1995). The following excerpts from inter-
    views illustrate the validation of imported body ideals and the emerging Fijian
    adolescent endorsement of remaking the body. For example, one young woman
    remarked, “[I like how] they look nice, the way they always have the figure and all.
    I mean, they look a bit tall and thin, not that very fat” (S-48). Another respondent
    said,

    Some of my friends, when they watch TV2 , when they see one actor, they want to look
    like that actor. They lose weight, and um some of them gain more weight. And that’s how
    my friends are affected by watching the TV. (S-59)

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 541

    Several other respondents reflected on how visual images on television motivated
    girls in their peer group to reshape themselves.

    S: [TV influenced] Fijians into trying to change their body. And they, they’re doing things
    to make their body look attractive, especially getting slim.

    I: Do you think television has affected your attitudes about your body or how much you
    care about your body?

    S: It has led me to try to get slim also and watching the type of food I eat. (S-46)
    I: Do you ever wish that you could be more like them [television characters]?
    S: Yes very much, [laughs] because they look so sexy, and I know they look nice.
    I: What makes them sexy?
    S: The way they, the way they act in the television, I like it.
    I: Have you ever done anything to be more like them?
    S: Uh-huh. [laughs] I think so. [laughs] Well ah, I used to go into the town and look for

    some clothes that fits me that I think they, which I can compare to the ones I see on
    television, you know, and I take them home. [ . . . ] I have to act like them, and I have to
    see myself in the mirror, that’s all. That’s how I do it.

    I: Do you ever, do you think that watching TV or videos has affected how you feel about
    the way you look?

    S: Yes, I think so. Well ah, I just see those ones who are on the television, and the way that
    they look, I want to be like them.

    I: Do you think that watching TV or videos has affected the way you feel about your body
    or your weight?

    S: Yes, very much. I have, ah, you know, when I see them I think that I have to lose weight.
    (S-20)

    There was also evidence that the redefined aesthetic ideals were embodied and
    identified in peers they wished to emulate:

    I: How do [your parents] want you to look?
    S: Um, they want me to look like um some attractive women nowadays. That they dressed,

    dress beautiful, that they dress very nice, and beautiful for their hair cuts and their weight.
    They’re so slim and tall from having, they just imagine that I look like I can be like them.
    So they are very possibly, like, looking at my weight.

    I: They hope you will become like those women?
    S: Yes.
    I: And how about you? Do you want to become like those women or do you want to become

    different?
    S: I want to become those women. That they are very slim and tall, that I’m losing my

    weight, that I’m trying to be like them. (S-24)

    In addition, interview data were noteworthy for multiple references to televi-
    sion commercials that featured exercise equipment. It appears that the aggressive
    marketing of fitness equipment promoted an ethos of body cultivation among
    the respondents. The following interview excerpts illustrate the effects of such
    advertising.

    Well, American television, I think that is, I mean they are the best, cause they are intro-
    ducing [ . . . ] a modern technology in order to lose our weight, and also I think they give

    542 A.E. BECKER

    modern advertisements on how we should lose our weight, like exercising and all those,
    and the type of food that they introduce on the advertisements. I think that is good. (S-62)

    This study participant also observed that exercise equipment was increasingly
    popular among her peers: “Well, most of the women, most of the Fijian houses
    I’ve been visiting, they got that kind of equipment that they’re introducing, like
    Fast Track and Fast Rider.” All this resulted in her wishing to join in, as evidenced
    in her comment: “I really just want myself to be like that. I feel like owning one
    equipment like that.”

    Other comments resonated with the desire to purchase exercise equipment
    advertised on television.

    I mean [TV] has shown how to become thin [ . . . ] I mean the machines and all how to
    get thin. They always show in the TV and I always see. (S-48)

    When they, when they show exercising [on TV], I mean exercising shows, and then I
    feel that I should be like that, I should lose my weight. (S-16)

    On the subject of exercise equipment, another young woman noted her motivation
    to obtain exercise equipment, inspired by television:

    [TV] affect[s] me because sometimes I feel fat, and I usually encourage my mom to buy,
    I should, at this point every day, I should be at home and use the Power Rider for losing
    some weight at home. (S-34)3

    The eagerness to acquire a piece of exercise equipment for the household—an
    obvious parallel to the enthusiastic purchase of television sets during the same
    period—is in one respect remarkable, given the cost relative to the disposable
    income, but in another respect a completely predictable response to the desire that
    the ads stimulated.

    Identity and roadmaps: Navigating unfamiliar social terrain

    “I have to look at what they’re doing and cram so that I can become one of
    them.” (S-26)

    “[C]ulture in Fiji normally accepts women here as big, heavy. In the TV, the
    women are thin, so it has [affected cultural traditions in Fiji].” (S-58)

    Generally, adolescent respondents in this study were quite forthcoming about
    their admiration for and desire to emulate characters portrayed on television. In
    some surprising ways, they frequently appeared to identify with characters on
    television. Although their expressed admiration was not restricted to appearance,
    commentary about thinness, hairstyles, and dress was the most prominent. In
    addition, however, respondents noted other characteristics of television characters
    that they admired or wished to emulate. For example, several indicated an interest
    in the character Xena from the show Xena, Warrior Princess, because of her
    physical strength and embodiment of female ability to equal men. Others singled

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 543

    out characters who were focused on helping others—a trait very much related to
    more traditional Fijian values. Frequently, respondents made clear their strategy to
    model themselves on television characters. They referred to their changing local
    world and benefits to learning about global culture from these characters. Indeed, it
    became clear from these interview data that adolescent girls were using television
    to map out pathways to employment.

    The following interview excerpt illustrates this point:

    I: What do you think of American TV?
    S: I uh, in the American TV, I think it’s good because it give us uh, information and uh, it

    always [helps] us to, to see what [things are going on] around in our, in our world today.
    I think it’s good to watch American TV.

    I: What show or shows do you like the best?
    S: Uh, only the uh, Shortland Street and uh, and uh, and news that come in the world. World

    news.
    I: Why do you like these shows?
    S: Uh, because us, it help me in my, it help me in my future and it always it almost

    help me to know what it’s going on around the world ‘cause [ . . . ] in the TV so we
    can see what it is happening around the world and it can teach us uh, many lesson.
    (S-23)

    Yes. It’s really affects the way that I look. Sometimes we copy the, like for example on the
    TV, we are copying what, what is being advertised, we copy it and try to show it to our
    friends. (S-24)

    Others further indicated that television was having a sweeping and generally
    positive effect on ethnic Fijians.

    S: [TV] teaches us, uh it teaches us some kind of, of the other worlds that we don’t know
    about America.

    I: Which shows do you like the best? What programs do you like the best?
    S: Beverly Hills.
    I: Why do you like that show?
    S: Because it teaches me what I should do, and what I should not do.
    I: In what terms? In what ways, what you should do how? [. . . In what way] do you mean

    that?
    S: Ah, about my future, life, what is good and what is bad about [the] future. (S-26)

    [The characters on television,] they’re very marvelous. They’re very nice. They really
    look good. They very, they showing us [. . . ] the way, they’re very happy. They’re
    helping me, and they’re helping other people as well. They change our lifestyle.
    (S-64)

    In addition to indicating their use of television as a general guide to life, subjects
    frequently expressed concrete admiration for the appearance of specific television
    characters. Perhaps this is best expressed in the latter respondent’s explanation
    for the impact of television characters on her feelings about her appearance:
    “[ . . . ] I want to be like them. I want to be just like those people.” The dimensions
    most important to her centered on appearance, weight, and self-presentation as

    544 A.E. BECKER

    she listed “[t]heir weight, the way they dress up, the way they eat, and the way
    they talk” as the aspects that she perceived had most affected her. Another subject
    commented that the widespread emulation of television characters’ “eating habits
    and styles, of clothing styles” stemmed from the girls “trying to practice what they
    see on TV and videos” (S-61).

    Interestingly, character and physical qualities of television characters were
    sometimes conflated, as in the following two excerpts:

    Well, I just want to be like her [Xena]. Like the actions that she takes, and also
    sometimes she makes decisions. I mean, even the old man and the adults have to lis-
    ten to her, so I really want myself to be like that. And also, I like the look of her
    body, the shape of her body sometimes I really want myself to be like her [ . . . ].
    (S-62)

    [I admire] Xena cause she’s a woman, and she can fight more with a–especially with the
    tall, the giants, you know? And she killed a man, like in some of the men, they come in and
    try to make uh, to fight against her, but she is Xena. She tried her best to kill them, cause
    she is a woman and she’s, but you know like that is, men, they think that they do things,
    but look what the men can do, girls can do too. (S-50)

    Whereas the latter study participant reported her friends’ admiration for the “Xena”
    character based on her modeling of gender parity, she indicated that the television
    show motivated her to emulate Xena’s figure: “when Xena started, from there I
    started to change my, I lose weight” (S-50).

    Competitive social positioning

    “And those kinds of [fat and short] people too, they are not, they don’t have jobs
    because of their weight, and I mean the way they ate and all.” (S-48)

    Interview respondents often intimated that their emulation of television characters
    was strategically motivated by a desire to position themselves competitively
    vis-à-vis their peers. It is noteworthy here that competition and achievement are not
    traditionally sanctioned values among ethnic Fijians, although explicit references
    to competition were made by some of the subjects. Indeed, traditional Fijian cul-
    ture has not supported upward social mobility, and aspirations to higher education
    and social pretensions were often actively criticized and discouraged. Thus, it ap-
    pears that television content as well as new opportunities for social and economic
    advancement may have stimulated this discourse. It is also possible that the ques-
    tions posed precipitated—or at least brought to a more explicit level—the desire to
    reposition themselves. This competitive ethos was often embedded in concerns ar-
    ticulated about securing a good job. Related to this, several respondents indicated
    their perception that overeating or overweight promoted laziness—something
    they wished to avoid in conventional domestic responsibilities in their homes.

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 545

    Illustrations of modeling on television characters to become competitive for jobs
    follow in interview excerpts.

    I have to follow what they do [on Shortland Street . . .] so that I can be, I can be good in
    that particular jobs. (S-23)

    Another young women explained how she perceived that copying actors en-
    hanced her chances at getting a job:

    The [actors] are very smart when they act. They look very beautiful and nice. The [. . .]
    way they speak and the way they smile and the way they act on the TV is very good. But it
    also taught me a lesson. (S-24)

    Specifically, she reflected that “sometimes we ourselves, students, copied [ac-
    tors] so we can present it to others just to show that we are really interested in
    such a job [ . . . ].” She concluded by saying that the compelling reason to emulate
    television characters was “to become successful in whatever I want” (S-24).

    In some cases, respondents were in fact quite pragmatic in their wish to lose
    weight to compete for particular jobs. For example, the following three young
    women talked about their perception (possibly quite accurate) that achieving a
    slim figure was requisite to obtaining the sought-after position of flight attendant
    on Air Pacific.

    I wanted to lose my weight because I am looking for my future depending on my career
    what type of career I want, so I want to lose my weight such a job and sometimes you
    become fat we are not suited for that kind of career or that kind of job that we want. Like
    for example, uh, flight attendants [ . . . ] we could see that they are, they are slim and tall
    and very thin. From there I can figure it out that I want to lose my weight because of my
    career, career, career. (S-24)

    [I want to lose weight] because I don’t want to become fat, and your fat leads to obesity.
    And before just because of my mission, I wanted to become an air hostess, and I wanted to
    lose weight. [ . . . ] And you know air hostess, they want people who are tall and thin, and
    not that fat. (S-48)

    [B]ecause I’m too fat, I’m not too happy. [ . . . ] when I leave school, I want to become
    flight attendant so I think the most important thing is my weight. So I have to cut it down
    [. . . ]. (S-46)

    Interest in television characters as role models for success in finding jobs was
    not restricted to appearance. For example, one respondent commented that she
    admired Scully, a character from the X-Files because of both her courage and her
    success in her employment. She said she wanted to be more like this character
    because, “I want to have a good job like her and, ah, and to have a better future”
    (S-16). In addition, there was widespread admiration for the character Xena from
    Xena, Warrior Princess. As noted above, generally Xena was admired for her
    abilities, not just her figure, and some girls said they liked her because she was
    powerful and represented the possibility that women could work.

    546 A.E. BECKER

    [ . . . ] I’m a girl and Xena’s a girl, so I support Xena because she’s very brave and . . .
    because we often say that men are brave and not women. [ . . .] because I have two brothers
    I have to fight sometimes and say, “Oh look at us girls. We are brave and we are tougher
    than you boys. Look at you defending those boys. And those boys are just weak and Xena
    is much braver, so you boys are of no use. Because just in order to fight with my, to pass
    with my small brothers because they often say that boys are better than girls. But now at
    least we know that boys and girls are equal. Men and women are equal. (S-64)

    However, it was clear from others’ comments that social and economic success
    was conflated with a slim figure, as in the following two excerpts:

    [T]he actresses and all those girls, especially those European girls, I just like, I just
    admire them and want to be like them. I want their body, I want their size. I want myself to
    be in the same position as they are. (S-64)

    [S]ometimes we can see on TV . . . teenagers and they are very slim. They are the same
    ages but they are working, they are slim and they are very tall and they are cute, nice, so
    from there we want ourselves or we want our bodies to become like that. So we try to
    maintain our weight, try to lose a lot of weight to become more like them. (S-24)

    In addition to their explicit awareness of using television as a resource
    for guidance in succeeding and thriving in Fiji’s evolving cash economy,
    several respondents talked more explicitly about perceived social competition.
    Although Fijian society was traditionally one in which social status was ascribed,
    comparison of effort and talent was, not surprisingly, commonplace. On the
    other hand, upward social mobility was not a realistic option. However, the girls’
    narratives appeared to reflect an acceptance of self-promotion and competitive
    social positioning. For example, in explaining what she admired about television
    characters, one subject commented that she admired that “They act smart; they
    try to advertise themselves” (S-35). Additional comments revealed an overt sense
    of the competition girls experienced:

    [ . . . ] I think, teenagers have to lose weight, and as for teenage girl, she has to lose weight,
    and she has to attain a size which to be in competitive world, and to be, because in this
    age, teenage girls are competing with others, so we have to be like others, because many
    teenage girls are all fat [ . . . ] (S-64).

    This young woman qualified this statement with her belief that girls did not
    have to be the “thinnest,” but rather eat in an “average” way so as to avoid being
    overweight. She went on to describe why it was important to her to lose weight.
    It is noteworthy that she equates thinness with energy as well as social standing.

    I’ll lose weight firstly because of my standing. Because I want to be, in order to lose weight,
    when you lose weight, I think, when I lose weight I’ll be active, and I’ll have much energy
    to walk from here, to go from there and then there; to do some studying here; to do some
    reciting here. And also I just like to lose weight you know for my friends to like me—to be
    with me—because I think some of these fat girls are left out in this world because they are
    fat [ . . . ](S-64)

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 547

    Weight, energy, and productivity

    “I live on a farm here. Ah, I want to do more work to help my parents.
    [ . . . B]ecause my body’s too fat, it’s too lazy.

    So I want to lose weight in order to do more work.” (S-41)
    “When I eat less, it’s good for me, but when
    I eat too much, I couldn’t do [jobs].” (S-50)

    In contrast to a striking lack of commentary about being thin to be attractive
    to boys, many girls discussed their opinion that maintaining a lower weight or
    eating less made them less “lazy.” Parallels of economic sluggishness of the social
    body were not explicitly made, but it is intriguing that girls frequently associated
    thinness with ability to work, whereas more traditionally, a strong and robust body
    was associated with ability to work. Illustrations follow:

    Yes, my parents usually tell me to eat a small amount of food, not to eat, because when
    I eat a lot of food, I become lazy, sleepy. (S-7)

    It’s good for my health to be, to be lose weight because I am looking in future so that I
    can do a lot of work so I cannot get some type of sickness when I have to do that type of
    work. (S-23)

    I don’t feel good about [overeating] cause the eating is to get lazy. (S-56)

    [My family] usually tell me to lose weight so sometimes when I’m not interested in
    doing some work, that’s the time when they comment some more, some more words for me
    and told me that “we know you’re gaining weight. It’s better for you to lose weight, cause
    it’s better for you to lose weight when you’re doing some work at home it’s easier for you
    then just gaining weight and moving slowly and not doing some work fast” [ . . . ]. (S-44)

    This respondent and two others also tied their desire to be thin to the modeling of
    television characters:

    [Television characters in Xena and Hercules] look fit most of the time when I look at
    them, so I always admire if I could be, look, fit, look like them, so it’s easy for me to move
    around and do work. (S-44)

    No, I just want to be slim, because they [TV characters] are slim. Like it’s influencing
    me so much that I have to be slim. I have to be fast enough so to run around when in time
    of help. (S-45)

    It makes me feel good because I am thin and I can do every work in the family at home,
    unlike fat people who are always getting lazy and feel like relaxing all the time. (S-48)

    It is of note that another respondent commented that television itself interfered
    with productivity:

    Television makes people lazy. By watching television overnight, when they wake up in
    the morning and they are told to go somewhere and do some work and they are very lazy
    and it make them create conflicts in their home by not doing anything. (S-35)

    548 A.E. BECKER

    Although the concerns about overeating, overweight, and television resulting in
    laziness arguably flag a collective concern Fijian youth have as they wonder how
    Fiji will perform in the global economy, it is far from a uniform signal. That
    is, several girls expressed a more traditional opinion that eating and weighing
    more were beneficial in promoting an ability to work better, harkening back to the
    traditional valuation of robust body size in pre-television Fiji (Becker 1995). For
    example, one respondent described her ideal weight as

    Thin, not that thin. Like some people who are very skinny, I don’t want that. I mean a bit
    thin, not like very thin. I’ll be thin, and I want my body to be built, bigger and strong, not
    that kind of thin. (S-48)

    But others expressed more ambivalence in the optimal body size, very likely
    because aesthetic ideals and cultural meanings imbued in body shape are changing
    so rapidly. As an illustration, one subject said, “I feel a bit happy because uh, my
    parents always admire me if I lose weight, and it helps me in doing my work at
    home in the village”(S-35). On the other hand, the same subject also reported that
    her parents advised her to gain weight, saying, “we should gain weight because
    we can help more.” Similarly, another respondent said, “fat people can’t do more
    job at home, so that I can make myself slim so that I can do everything at home”
    (S-34). However, she also equated eating and weight with her ability to work in
    the following statement:

    I feel happy more about [eating a lot of food], because I do a lot of job at home cause I’m,
    I’m the only girl at home. I can help my mom. [ . . . ] My mom can’t do everything at home
    because she is very old so they tell me that I am heavy enough to do the job at home so I
    can take a lot of more food at home. (S-34)

    Finally, another respondent also expressed approval of an intermediate size in
    describing why she wishes to resemble Xena:

    Before when I, you know when I was a lot bigger and fat, you know, we can’t do what
    Xena can do. Like, Xena, she’s usually flying away. I mean, then doing some things when
    she goes through the air and doing such [ . . . ] like that. I just, myself, I want to be like that
    too. You know, like be, but not like a piece of paper, you know, like when the wind comes
    it just float away? So I just want to be like that. (S-50)

    Connection to disordered eating

    “I think [TV] is bad because most girls take the dieting.
    They end up being sick.” (S-58)

    Although the implications of changes in body ideals, an emerging legitimation of
    reshaping the body, and an influx of images and values that stimulate consumerism
    for fostering the emergence of body image concerns and disordered eating may
    be intuitive from a clinical perspective, it is by no means clear that subjects were

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 549

    all explicitly aware of their use of television characters as role models. Having
    said that, however, the openly expressed admiration of lifestyles and body shapes
    portrayed on television appeared quite prevalent, and some subjects did actually
    connect the dots between transitioning body ideals, values, and eating pathology.
    Moreover, it is quite likely that some, if not much, of the interest, valuation, and
    admiration for characters may have been diffused throughout the peer group inde-
    pendently of television exposure (Becker et al. 2002) and thus affected schoolgirls
    both directly and indirectly. In any case, the apparent connection between compar-
    ison with television characters and a new standard they set, self-disparagement,
    misplaced efforts to reshape the body, and disordered eating attitudes and behav-
    iors is a serious public health concern.

    The following respondent immediately associated weight concerns and un-
    healthy dieting with television in the following interview excerpt:

    I: What do you think of American television?
    S: Um, uh about weight?
    I: In general, or whatever you would like to talk about.
    S: I think that they portray a lot of skinny girls and very bad, you know, a very bad eating,

    especially [in] Fiji.
    I: Can you tell me how?
    S: Uh, they tend to say that being skinny is the in thing.
    I: That being skinny is the in thing?
    S: Yeah.
    I: Are there other ways that you think it’s bad?
    S: I think it’s bad because most girls take the dieting. They end up being sick.
    I: How, how does that happen?
    S: Uh, [ . . . ] the diet gets uncontrollable.
    I: How does a diet get uncontrollable?
    S: They can’t, they cannot eat, they have no appetite for eating anymore.
    I: Has that happened to people you know here in Fiji?
    S: Yes.
    I: Are they people your age, in the schools, things like that?
    S: Yeah.
    I: And what happens with them. Can you tell me a little bit more about it?
    S: Uh, they don’t know that they start on a diet, they keep on going on a diet and they just

    lose their appetite and they just get really skinny and they can’t get back to their normal
    weight. (S-58)

    These comments somewhat reflect a traditional ethnic Fijian concern about ap-
    petite loss (manifest in the syndrome macake). This informant’s model concerning
    the slippery slope of dieting leading to uncontrolled weight loss could as easily
    reflect macake as an eating disorder in this case.

    Another respondent who discussed taking diet pills as well as restrictive eating
    tied her desire to lose weight to peer opinion and role models on television:

    I: What do you think influences how you feel about your weight? What sort of things make
    you want to be thinner or like your weight? What sort of things do that? Friends, or
    family, or television? What sort of things?

    S: My friends. They tell them that I too fat, so I want to make myself fit, slim.

    550 A.E. BECKER

    I: How about your family? Does that influence how you feel about your body and your
    weight?

    S: Yes. They encourage me to take a diet so that I can have less weight than I have now,
    and uh make my body slim.

    I: How about television? Do you think that influences how you feel about your body?
    S: Yes
    I: Yeah?
    S: I see ads in the television, and I admire their fitness, their sizes. (S-61)

    One of the respondents who reported purging commented on how she tried to
    lose weight:

    Most of the times when I eat, I sometimes want to vomit it out. But, most of the times I
    miss my meals. And sometimes I walk in the farm, very heavy walk, so I can know for
    myself that I am losing my weight. (S-62)

    This study participant emphasized that her information on weight control came
    from viewing television: “I learn a lot from television. Doing those exercises, and
    the equipments that are being introduced” (S-62). Another respondent’s comments
    suggested how the body disparagement so entwined with eating disorders in the
    West can also creep into Fijian girls’ discourse.

    I: Does you family ever comment on your weight?
    S: Yes, when I’m too fat they comment about my weight.
    I: What do they say?
    S: They say that uh I’m eating too much food, and it makes me look like overweight.

    I: How does it make you feel when they say that?

    S: I feel like, I feel sad, and I want to cry sometimes. And uh, I don’t want to feel like

    overweight [ . . . ]. (S-59)

    She evidently felt demoralized by critical comments by both her family and her
    peers:

    They [my friends] say that um I’m like an old woman, and I’m too big. [ . . . ] I feel sad
    [ . . . ] and um sometimes I feel like to cry because the way they talk about my weight.
    (S-59)

    Another respondent, who said, “I think ah all those actors and actresses that
    they show on TV, they have a good figure and so I, I would like to be like them,”
    also made the following comments in her interview about perceived peer pressure
    to lose weight:

    I: Do your friends ever comment on your weight?
    S: Um yeah.
    I: What do they say?
    S: Ah, when I wear clothes that um, that, when I wear clothes that makes me look fat, I

    already say that I’m fat, and they say that I should do something in order to lose weight
    so that I can get a slimmer figure.

    I: How does it make you feel when they say that?

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 551

    S: I lose hope. I lose hope when they say that.
    I: Why do you lose hope?
    S: Cause I always been thinking about getting slimmer and when they say that, it really

    makes me hopeless. (S-46)

    Finally, a respondent who acknowledged having induced vomiting to lose weight
    described her observations on the effects of television on Fijian body image.

    I: Do you think that television is making Fijians ashamed of their bodies?
    S: Yeah, very much. Because Fijians are, most of us Fijians are, many of us, most, I can

    say most, we are brought up with those heavy foods, and our bodies are, we are getting
    fat. And now, we are feeling, we feel that it is bad to have this huge body. We have to
    have those thin, slim bodies. (S-64)

    DISCUSSION

    Minimally, and at the most superficial level, narrative data reflect a shift in fashion
    among the adolescent ethnic Fijian population studied. A shift in aesthetic ideals
    is remarkable in and of itself given the numerous social mechanisms that have
    long supported the preference for large bodies. Moreover, this change reflects a
    disruption of both apparently stable traditional preference for a robust body shape
    and the traditional disinterest in reshaping the body (Becker 1995).

    Subjects’ responses to television in this study also reflect a more complicated
    reshaping of personal and cultural identities inherent in their endeavors to reshape
    their bodies. Traditionally for Fijians, identity had been fixed not so much in
    the body as in family, community, and relationships with others, in contrast to
    Western-cultural models that firmly fix identity in the body/self. Comparatively
    speaking, social identity is manipulated and projected through personal, visual
    props in many Western social contexts, whereas this was less true in Fiji. Instead,
    Fijians have traditionally invested themselves in nurturing others—efforts that are
    then concretized in the bodies that one cares for and feeds. Hence, identity is
    represented (and experienced) individually and collectively through the well-fed
    bodies of others, not through one’s own body (again, comparatively speaking)
    (Becker 1995). In addition, since Fiji’s economy has until recently been based in
    subsistence agriculture, and since multiple cultural practices encourage distribu-
    tion of material resources, traditional Fijian identity has also not been represented
    through the ability to purchase and accumulate material goods.

    More broadly than interest in body shape, however, the qualitative data demon-
    strate a rather concrete identification with television characters as role models of
    successful engagement in Western, consumeristic lifestyles. Admiration and em-
    ulation of television characters appears to stem from recognition that traditional
    channels are ill-equipped to assist Fijian adolescents in navigating the landscape

    552 A.E. BECKER

    of rapid social change in Fiji. Unfortunately, while affording an opportunity to
    develop identities syntonic with the shifting social context, the behavioral mod-
    eling on Western appearance and customs appears to have undercut traditional
    cultural resources for identity-making (Becker et al. 2002). Specifically, narrative
    data reveal here that traditional sources of information about self-presentation
    and public comportment have been supplanted by captivating and convincing role
    models depicted in televised programming and commercials.

    It is noteworthy that the interest in reshaping the body differs in subtle but
    important ways from the drive for thinness observed in other social contexts. The
    discourse on reshaping the body is, indeed, quite explicitly and pragmatically fo-
    cused on competitive social positioning—for both employment opportunities and
    peer approval. This discourse on weight and body shape is suffused with moral
    as well as material associations (i.e., that appear to be commentary on the social
    body). That is, repeatedly expressed sentiment that excessive weight results in
    laziness and undermines domestic productivity may reflect a concern about how
    Fijians will “measure up” in the global economy. The juxtaposition of extreme
    affluence depicted on most television programs against the materially impover-
    ished Fijians associates the nearly uniformly thin bodies and restrained appetites
    of television characters with the (illusory) promise of economic opportunity and
    success. Each child’s future, as well as the fitness of the social body, seems to be
    at stake.

    In this sense, disordered eating among the Fijian schoolgirls in this study appears
    to be primarily an instrumental means of reshaping body and identity to enhance
    social and economic opportunities. From this perspective, it may be premature to
    comment on whether or not disordered eating behaviors share the same meaning
    as similar behaviors in other cultural contexts. It is also premature to say whether
    these behaviors correspond well to Western nosologic categories describing eat-
    ing disorders. Regardless of any differences in psychological significance of the
    behaviors, however, physiologic risks will be the same. Quite possibly—and this
    remains to be studied in further detail—disordered eating may also be a symbolic
    embodiment of the anxiety and conflict the youth experience on the threshold
    of rapid social change in Fiji and during their personal and collective navigation
    through it. Moreover, there is some preliminary evidence that the disordered eating
    is accompanied by clinical features associated with the illnesses elsewhere and
    eating disorders may be emerging in this context. Finally, television has certainly
    imported more than just images associating appearance with material success; it
    has arguably enhanced reflexivity about the possibility of reshaping one’s body
    and life trajectory and popularized the notion of competitive social positioning.

    The impact of imported media in societies undergoing transition on local
    values has been demonstrated in multiple societies (e.g., Cheung and Chan
    1996; Granzberg 1985; Miller 1998; Reis 1998; Tan et al. 1987; Wu 1990). As

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 553

    others have argued in other contexts, ideas from imported media can be used
    to negotiate “hybrid identities” (Barker 1997) and otherwise incorporated into
    various strategies for social positioning (Mazzarella 2003) and coping with
    modernization (Varan 1998). Likewise and ironically, here as in elsewhere in the
    world (see Anderson-Fye 2004, this issue), Fijian youth must craft an identity
    which adopts Western values about productivity and efficiency in the workplace
    while simultaneously selling their Fijian-ness (an essential asset to their role in the
    tourist industry). Self-presentation is thus carefully constructed so as to bridge and
    integrate dual identities. That these identities are not consistently smoothly fused
    is evidenced in the ambivalence in the narratives about how thin a body is actually
    ideal.

    The source of the emerging disordered eating among ethnic Fijian girls thus
    appears multifactorial and multidetermined. Media images that associate thinness
    with material success and marketing that promotes the possibility of reshaping
    the body have supported a perceived nexus between diligence (work on the body),
    appearance (thinness), and social and material success (material possessions, eco-
    nomic opportunities, and popularity with peers). Fijian self-presentation has ab-
    sorbed new dimensions related to buying into Western styles of appearance and the
    ethos of work on the body. A less articulated parallel to admiration for characters,
    bodies, and lifestyles portrayed on imported television is the demoralizing percep-
    tion of not comparing favorably as a population. It is as though a mirror was held
    up to these girls in which they perhaps saw themselves as poor and overweight.
    The eagerness they express in grooming themselves to be hard workers or perhaps
    obtain competitive jobs perhaps reflects their collective energy and anxiety about
    how they, as individuals, and as a Fijian people, are going to fare in a globalizing
    world. Thus preoccupation with weight loss and the restrictive eating and purging
    certainly reflect pragmatic strategies to optimize social and economic success. At
    the same time, they surely contribute to body- and self-disparagement and reflect
    an embodied distress about the uncertainty of personal future and the social body.

    Epidemiologic data from other populations confirm an association between
    social transition (e.g., transnational migration, modernization, urbanization) and
    disordered eating among vulnerable groups (Anderson-Fye and Becker 2003). In
    particular, the association between upward mobility and disordered eating across
    diverse populations has relevance here (Anderson-Fye 2000; Buchan and Gregory
    1984; Silber 1986; Soomro et al. 1995; Yates 1989). Exposure to Western media
    images and ideas may further contribute to disordered eating by first promoting
    comparisons that result in perceived economic and social disadvantage and then
    promoting the notion that efforts to reshape the body will enhance social status.
    It can be argued that girls and young women undergoing social transition may
    perceive that social status is enhanced by positioning oneself competitively through
    the informed use of cultural symbols—e.g., by bodily appearance and thinness

    554 A.E. BECKER

    (Becker and Hamburg 1996). This is comparable to observations that children
    of immigrants to the U.S. (for whom the usual parental “map of experience” is
    lacking) substitute alternative “cultural guides” from the media as resources for
    negotiating successful social strategies (Suarez-Orozco and Suarez-Orozco 2001).
    In both scenarios, adolescent girls and young women assimilating to new cultural
    standards encounter a ready cultural script for comportment and appearance in the
    media.

    CONCLUSIONS

    “I’ve wondered how television is made and how the actress and actors, I always
    wondered how television, how people acted on it, and I’m kind of wondering

    whether it’s true or not.”(S-48)

    The increased prevalence of disordered eating in ethnic Fijian schoolgirls is not
    the only story—or even the most important one—that can be pieced together from
    the respondents’ narratives on television and its impact.4 Nor are images and
    values transmitted through televised media singular forces in the chain of events
    that has led to an apparent increase in disordered eating attitudes and behaviors.
    The impact of media coupled with other sweeping economic and social change
    is likely to affect Fijian youth and adults in many ways. On the other hand, this
    particular story allows a window into the powerful impact and vulnerability of
    this adolescent female population. This story also allows a frame for exploring
    resilience and suggesting interventions for future research.

    In some important ways, Fiji is a unique context for investigating the impact of
    media imagery on adolescents. In Fiji in particular, the evolving and multiple—
    and potentially overlapping or dissonant—social terrain presents novel challenges
    and opportunities for adolescents navigating their way in the absence of guidance
    from “conventional” wisdom and social hierarchies that may have grown obsolete
    in some respects. Doubtless the profound ways in which adolescent girls are
    influenced by media imagery extend beyond the borders of Fiji and the ways
    in which young women in Fiji consume and reflect on televised media may
    suggest mechanisms for its impact on youth in other social contexts. This study,
    therefore, allows insight into the ways in which social change intersects with the
    developmental tasks of adolescence to pose the risk of eating disorders and other
    youth risk behaviors.

    Adolescent girls and young women in this and other indigenous, small-scale
    societies may also be especially vulnerable to the effects of media exposure for
    several key reasons. For example, in the context of rapid social change, these
    girls and young women may lack traditional role models for how to successfully
    maneuver in a shifting economic and political environment. Moreover, in societies

    TELEVISION, DISORDERED EATING, AND YOUNG WOMEN IN FIJI 555

    in which status is traditionally ascribed rather than achieved, girls and women
    may feel more compelled to secure their social position through a mastery of self-
    presentation that draws heavily from imported media. It is a logical and frightening
    conclusion that vulnerable girls and women across diverse populations who feel
    marginalized from the locally dominant culture’s sources of prestige and status
    may anchor their identities in widely recognized cultural symbols of prestige
    popularized by media-imported ideas, values, and images. Further, these girls and
    women have no reference for comparison of the televised images to the “realities”
    they portray and thus to critique and deconstruct the images they see compared
    with girls and women who are “socialized” into a culture of viewership. Without
    thoughtful interventions5 —yet to be explored with the affected communities—
    the unfortunate outcome is likely to be continued increasing rates of disordered
    eating and other youth risk behaviors in vulnerable populations undergoing rapid
    modernization and social transition.

    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

    I am grateful to the Tui Sigatoka for her gracious assistance with all aspects of data
    collection in Fiji, and the Fiji Ministry of Education for assistance in identifying
    schools at which to interview subjects. I am also indebted to Kesaia Navara and
    Rebecca Burwell for interviewing subjects, as well as Erin Roland, Alexandra
    Speck, and Allison Van Fleet for their help with transcription. Finally, I thank
    Paul Hamburg for the mentorship that laid the foundation for much of this work.
    Funding for this study was provided in part by The Irene Pollin Fellowship in
    Memory of Cherry Adler and the Milton Fund, both of Harvard Medical School.

    NOTES

    1. Narrative excerpts are identified by subject number to preserve anonymity. In some
    excerpts, the interviewer’s words are included to give a context for the response. In such
    cases, the interviewer’s comments follow an “I” and the subject’s comments follow an “S.”

    2. When television was first introduced to Fiji in 1995, the programming was chiefly
    situation comedies, dramatic series, and news imported from the US, Australia, and
    New Zealand. With the exception of some sports events, locally produced programming
    was limited to one 20-minute news segment aired twice daily. Study respondents favored
    Melrose Place, Beverly Hills 90210, Xena, Warrior Princess (New Zealand-produced), and
    Shortland Street (an Australian-produced dramatic series).

    3. Some of the interview quotes were published previously in Becker AE, Burwell RA,
    Gilman SE, Herzog DB, Hamburg P. Eating behaviours and attitudes following prolonged
    television exposure among ethnic Fijian adolescent girls. The British Journal of Psychiatry
    2002, 180: 509–14.

    4. For example, the increased incidence of suicide and other self-injury in Fiji (Pridmore
    et al. 1995) may index social distress related to rapid social change.

    556 A.E. BECKER

    5. Prevention efforts that might be useful include psychoeducational information about
    the psychological and medical risks associated with bingeing, purging, and self-starvation
    as well as media literacy programs that assist youth in critical and informed viewing of
    televised programming and commercials.

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    ANNE E. BECKER MD, PhD
    Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
    and Adult Eating and Weight Disorders Program
    Department of Psychiatry
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    E-mail: anne becker@hms.harvard.edu

    Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.

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