The wording is from the original paper.pic.twitter.com/oUbgxhjRzf
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I don't have access to the paper. Did they measure any outcomes outside of the sexual domain? The abstract made it sound as though their outcome measures focused only on sexual self-schema and psychosexual health.
What do you think, @ElliNude ?
Pure speculation on my part but standard rap from more than one clinical psychologist with whom I've spoken. The larger point was the first one: the outcomes reported are too narrow to know whether seeing oneself as a sex object is on the whole a good thing.
I think there's some confusion twixt us, probably b/c we're tweeting and doing it asynchronously. Let me try to clarify my thoughts, as I doubt you and I are far apart on the study itself. 1/N
The first sentence of the abstract: "Feminists have debated whether enjoyment of sexualization (ES)—when women find sexualized attention from men rewarding—represents empowerment or patriarchal oppression." This is a big (attention-grabbing) open. 2/N
Hang on... this study doesn't say a word about how or whether "enjoyment of being viewed as a sex object" is linked to better non-sexual outcomes, correct? Or about what events precede women seeing themselves in this way?
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