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Nancy L. Brown, PhDAdolescent Health
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Sexy Girls

Nancy L. Brown, PhD
Those two words should not be together, but gone are the days of innocence and commitment to protecting young girls from sex. The American Psychological Association (APA) just released a report that calls for the media and advertising to stop sexualizing young girls. The sexualization of girls is so pervasive in our society that it can feel normal for young girls to look like teenagers and for teenagers to look like adults. If you don't believe me, just go shopping for a preteen and try to find something that is not body-hugging, low-cut, too short, or too spangly.

Just in case you are unclear what "sexualization of young girls" really means, a sexualized image suggests sexual availability to the exclusion of other personal characteristics and qualities, which is inappropriate. Two examples are 1) child beauty pageants in which young girls wear make-up and false teeth to replace baby teeth, thong underwear with muppets or phrases like "eye-candy;" and 2) lyrics that include phrases like:"so blow me bitch," "I rock for topless dancers," and "I tell hoes all the time, bitch get in my car."

The APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls studied published research on the content and effects of media (including TV, movies, music videos, lyrics, magazines, video games, and the Internet) and found that the consequences of the sexualization of girls in media today are very real and are likely to be a negative influence on girls' healthy development.

Specifically, research evidence shows that sexualization and objectification:
  • undermine a person's confidence in and comfort with her own body, leading to emotional and self-image problems, including shame and anxiety;
  • are linked to eating disorders, low self-esteem, and depression;
  • have negative consequences on girls' ability to develop a healthy sexual self-image.
The study also suggests that men may be less likely to be satisfied with their female partners as a result of the unrealistic expectations created by the media portrayal of women. There also seems to be a tie between viewing pornography and sexualizing women. We see this as the questions submitted on our teen site (We're Talking Teen Health) more and more ask questions like why women are "supposed" to shave their genitals, which is obviously coming from partners who view images of women in pornography.

The good news is that parents can play a major protective and educative role and schools should teach media literacy skills to all students and should include information on the negative effects of sexualization of girls in those programs. We can help teens talk about how marketing techniques make girls' and women's bodies look unnatural and focus people's attention on their bodies as if that is all that is valuable about them, but to do this, we have to be engaging in the same media they are experiencing.

Photo credit: Jakob.Montrasio.Net

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4 Comments:

  • At Tue Feb 27, 09:28:00 AM 2007, Blogger Mother Jones RN said…

    Thank you for this post. I see the problems this issue causes all the time when I work with kids on our unit. Kids are growing up too fast.

    MJ

     
  • At Sun Mar 04, 02:16:00 PM 2007, Blogger Kim said…

    Neither of my girls had to deal with this. Why? Ummm...I didn't let them!

    I listened to what they listened to, I watched what they watched, I kept these new magazines like Cosmo Teen, and even Seventeen magazine out of the house because of the sex content of the articles!

    They dress their age and they rarely show cleavage (my older daughter wishes she HAD some)and there isn't a piece of thong underwear within ten miles of this house.

    They want a song from iTunes, I check the lyrics first - and I'm a huge rock and roll person!

    But you are right - the parents have got to be media savvy to be able to discuss WHY some things are not good and to listen to what their daughters are absorbing.

    Needless to say, this rubbed off on my son, too.

     
  • At Fri Mar 09, 06:09:00 PM 2007, Blogger d blake said…

    When I was a peds resident several years ago, I was seeing an 11-yr-old girl for a well check. As always, I asked Mom and child about whether they had discussed sexuality and family mores. The Mom's reply, "Oh yeah, my 15-yr-old daughter just had a baby, so we've discussed that at length." I walked over to the girl to examine her. It was at that point that I realized the girl's shirt had "SEXY GIRL" emblazoned across the front of it. I could only (internally) shake my head.

     
  • At Thu Jun 21, 01:20:00 PM 2007, Blogger Melony Carey and Chrissie Wagner said…

    There is lots of good information on this site. I'm glad to know you are there. We always have lots of health questions from parents and teens alike.
    Chrissie Wagner
    The Care and Feeding of Teenagers

     

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