par Gervais, Sarah;Bernard, Philippe ;Riemer, Abigail R.
Référence Revue internationale de psychologie sociale, 28, 1, page (153-181)
Publication Publié, 2015
Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : The purpose of this investigation was to test a mediation model with cultural orientation, specifically vertical individualism (i.e., perceiving the self as an autonomous individual and accepting inequality) and social comparison predicting sexual objectification perpetration. The present work integrates literatures suggesting that objectification is primarily a Western phenomenon with theories suggesting that objectification results from local processing and power. Men and women completed measures of cultural orientation, social comparison orientation, and interpersonal sexual objectification perpetration including body evaluation and unwanted explicit sexual advances. Consistent with hypotheses, bivariate correlations and path analyses revealed that vertical individualism predicted social comparison orientation and sexual objectification perpetration, specifically body evaluation (e.g., objectifying gazes, appearance commentary). Further, social comparison emerged as a mediator of the relation between vertical individualism and sexual objectification perpetration. Interestingly, the same mediation model held for both men and women, and predicted body evaluation, but not unwanted sexual advances. Implications for cross and within-cultural differences in objectification, predictors of objectification(e.g., culture, local processing, power), and interventions to prevent objectification are discussed.