Characterizing a body positive online forum: Resistance and pursuit of appearance-ideals

•The commenters on r/BodyAcceptance were characterized in terms of their shared topics of interaction online.•A central community, aligned with body acceptance, focused on resistance to appearance pressures.•Large proportions of commenters also revealed interests in body/shape modification and cosme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Body image 2020-06, Vol.33, p.199-206
Hauptverfasser: Rodgers, R.F., Meyer, C., McCaig, D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The commenters on r/BodyAcceptance were characterized in terms of their shared topics of interaction online.•A central community, aligned with body acceptance, focused on resistance to appearance pressures.•Large proportions of commenters also revealed interests in body/shape modification and cosmetics. The body positive movement emerged in response to pressure to pursue the unattainable thin ideal, and promotes a more accepting stance towards the body. To date, however, little is known regarding the nature of online body positive content. Using publicly available data from a large online discussion platform (Reddit), all the forums to which commenters on a body acceptance forum (N = 1262) had also contributed were identified. For each pairing of 50 representative forums (i.e., a large number and proportion of body acceptance commenters), the commenter-overlap between the two forums was used to compute a network model, to detect communities of body acceptance commenters. By manually reviewing the topics of each community’s forums, the shared interests of these commenters were identified. The majority of commenters (86 %) contributed to forums relating to women, feminism, relationships and support, and mental health. Large proportions of the commenters also revealed an interest in topics including body weight/shape, eating, exercise, and cosmetics. These findings confirm that original feminist tenets of body positivity remain present. However, our findings also suggest the existence of a sizeable subgroup interacting with topics related to the thin ideal, perhaps illustrating a gradual absorption of the body positive movement into mainstream culture.
ISSN:1740-1445
1873-6807
DOI:10.1016/j.bodyim.2020.03.005