Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models

At least at the public level, conservative societies try to prevent women from exposing their bodies, and women who work as glamour models can be seen as transgressors and can be accused of playing a passive role as “sex objects”. In contrast with those views, research shows that pre-Internet models were active participants who perceived their bodies as a way of obtaining resources and power. In order to examine if the same is true in the age of Internet modeling (i.e. if Internet models perceive themselves as passive or active), and if their career choice was affected by geographic origin (a measure of how conservative their society is), we recorded the origin and self-descriptions that models published during the early period of web glamour sites (2001). Our population was composed of all the American models in the international website Glamour Models, the main website for this type of modeling. Our data does not support the hypothesis that conservative states are under-represented: rather there were more models from states with larger populations. These models did not present themselves as passive: their self-descriptions stated that they are active and creative, and they openly expressed the limits on the type of work that they accepted. By presenting data from a decade ago, our work serves as a baseline for future studies of how self views of women’s bodies and characteristics may evolve in this field.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mónge-Najera, Julián, Vega Corrales, Karla
Format: Digital revista
Language:spa
Published: Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2011
Online Access:https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/204
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:revistas.investiga.uned.ac.cr:article204
record_format ojs
spelling oai:revistas.investiga.uned.ac.cr:article2042022-09-02T02:22:46Z Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models Mónge-Najera, Julián Vega Corrales, Karla Modeling glamour body perception roles. Modelaje cuerpo autopercepción femenina. At least at the public level, conservative societies try to prevent women from exposing their bodies, and women who work as glamour models can be seen as transgressors and can be accused of playing a passive role as “sex objects”. In contrast with those views, research shows that pre-Internet models were active participants who perceived their bodies as a way of obtaining resources and power. In order to examine if the same is true in the age of Internet modeling (i.e. if Internet models perceive themselves as passive or active), and if their career choice was affected by geographic origin (a measure of how conservative their society is), we recorded the origin and self-descriptions that models published during the early period of web glamour sites (2001). Our population was composed of all the American models in the international website Glamour Models, the main website for this type of modeling. Our data does not support the hypothesis that conservative states are under-represented: rather there were more models from states with larger populations. These models did not present themselves as passive: their self-descriptions stated that they are active and creative, and they openly expressed the limits on the type of work that they accepted. By presenting data from a decade ago, our work serves as a baseline for future studies of how self views of women’s bodies and characteristics may evolve in this field. Por lo menos a nivel público, las sociedades conservadoras tratan de impedir que las mujeres expongar sus cuerpos, y las que trabajan como modelos de glamour pueden ser vistas como transgresoras o acusadas por otros sectores de jugar un papel pasivo como “objetos sexuales”. En contraste con estas opiniones, la investigación muestra que las modelos de la época previa a Internet fueron participantes activas que percibían sus cuerpos como un medio para alcanzar recursos y poder. Con el fin de examinar si lo mismo es cierto en la era de Internet (es decir, si las modelos de Internet se perciben a si mismas como agentes pasivos o activos), y si su elección de carrera se vio afectada por el origen geográfico (una medida de cuán conservadora es su sociedad), analizamos el origen y las auto-descripciones que publicaban las modelos en el período inicial de Internet (2001). Nuestra población se compone de todas las modelos estadounidenses en el sitio internacional GlamourModels, principal sitio web de este tipo de modelaje. Nuestros datos no apoyan la hipótesis de que los estados conservadores estén sub-representados: en realidad, hubo más modelos de los estados con mayor población. Estas modelos no se presentan como pasivas, sino que según su autopercepción se califican a si mismas como mujeres activas y creativas, expresando abiertamente los límites en el tipo de trabajo que aceptaban. Estos datos del 2001 tienen el valor adicional de servir para comparación en estudios futuros. Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica 2011-06-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/204 10.22458/urj.v3i1.204 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 3 No. 1 (2011); 45-51 UNED Research Journal; Vol. 3 Núm. 1 (2011); 45-51 1659-441X 1659-4266 spa https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/204/82
institution UNED CR
collection OJS
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-cuadernos
tag revista
region America Central
libraryname Centro de Información, Documentación y Recursos Bibliográficos
language spa
format Digital
author Mónge-Najera, Julián
Vega Corrales, Karla
spellingShingle Mónge-Najera, Julián
Vega Corrales, Karla
Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
author_facet Mónge-Najera, Julián
Vega Corrales, Karla
author_sort Mónge-Najera, Julián
title Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
title_short Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
title_full Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
title_fullStr Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
title_full_unstemmed Self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
title_sort self view of women’s bodies and characteristics in early glamour website models
description At least at the public level, conservative societies try to prevent women from exposing their bodies, and women who work as glamour models can be seen as transgressors and can be accused of playing a passive role as “sex objects”. In contrast with those views, research shows that pre-Internet models were active participants who perceived their bodies as a way of obtaining resources and power. In order to examine if the same is true in the age of Internet modeling (i.e. if Internet models perceive themselves as passive or active), and if their career choice was affected by geographic origin (a measure of how conservative their society is), we recorded the origin and self-descriptions that models published during the early period of web glamour sites (2001). Our population was composed of all the American models in the international website Glamour Models, the main website for this type of modeling. Our data does not support the hypothesis that conservative states are under-represented: rather there were more models from states with larger populations. These models did not present themselves as passive: their self-descriptions stated that they are active and creative, and they openly expressed the limits on the type of work that they accepted. By presenting data from a decade ago, our work serves as a baseline for future studies of how self views of women’s bodies and characteristics may evolve in this field.
publisher Universidad Estatal a Distancia, Costa Rica
publishDate 2011
url https://revistas.uned.ac.cr/index.php/cuadernos/article/view/204
work_keys_str_mv AT mongenajerajulian selfviewofwomensbodiesandcharacteristicsinearlyglamourwebsitemodels
AT vegacorraleskarla selfviewofwomensbodiesandcharacteristicsinearlyglamourwebsitemodels
_version_ 1756101896958902272