Sexual objectification, the
tendency to reduce women to their bodies, body parts, or sexual functions for
use by others, has been theorized to set the stage for more severe acts of
violence but has been largely absent from the existing sexual victimization
literature.
The purpose of this study was to explore the role of sexual
objectification in mediating the well-established link between women's alcohol
use and sexual victimization. A large sample of undergraduate women (N = 673)
reported their alcohol use (frequency and quantity), experiences of sexual
objectification (body evaluation and unwanted explicit sexual advances), and
sexual victimization.
Results indicated positive bivariate correlations among
all study variables. Path analyses showed that mild forms of sexual
objectification (body evaluation) mediated the link between the frequency of
alcohol use and more extreme forms of sexual objectification (unwanted
advances).
Furthermore, the combined effect of sexual objectification (body
evaluation and unwanted advances) mediated the link between alcohol use
(frequency and quantity) and sexual victimization. The current findings are
among the first to evaluate sexual objectification as a mechanism in the link
between alcohol use and sexual victimization.
Results suggest that efforts to
prevent alcohol-related sexual violence may benefit from addressing sexual
objectification.
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By: Haikalis M1, DiLillo D2, Gervais SJ2.
- 1University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA MichelleHaik@gmail.com.
- 2University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA.
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