Gender plays a significant role in the relationship between a person’s weight and the socioeconomic status of the people in their lives, research suggests.
Although Western cultures associate high socioeconomic status with slenderness, the relationship between status and weight is actually more nuanced.
Using nationally representative data from the 2004 US General Social Survey, Lijun Song, professor of sociology at Vanderbilt University, and graduate students Philip Pettis and Bhumika PiyaSong analyzed the relationship between an individual’s weight as measured by a visual evaluation, the socioeconomic status of the people they’re close to as measured by their educational attainment, lifestyle as measured by self-reported athleticism, and gender.
While Song and her colleagues found no direct link between an individual’s weight and the socioeconomic status of their personal network, they did find an indirect one through lifestyle.
“Arguably people with higher status are more weight-conscious, they’re more concerned about their own body image, they’re more likely to practice weight-related lifestyle such as dietary habits and physical activities and control their weight,” Song says.
“And if you are surrounded by people like that, you’re exposed to a stronger network norm of weight control. You’re more likely to become more conscious of your body weight, more likely to receive assistance with weight management, and are more likely to observe and imitate weight-control behaviors.”
The data bear this out: People with a more educated personal network are more likely to describe themselves as athletic, which can lead to lower body weights.
Pressure on women
However, Song and her collaborators found a wrinkle: It’s only true for women.
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There’s no question women pay a social price for excess weight, Song says. “They suffer more in terms of educational attainment, they suffer more in terms of occupational status and income, and they suffer more in terms of finding a partner in their life. And women with higher socioeconomic status suffer even more. They have to face even more rigorous societal expectations,” Song says.
“If they’re surrounded by people of high socioeconomic status, they’re going to face and conform to the body weight norm of slender femininity even more.”
Different concerns for men
For men, however, the reverse is true: Having higher-status contacts is associated with higher weights. “This seemingly surprising finding reflects the body weight norm of breadwinner masculinity,” Song says.
The researchers theorize that while the slenderness ideal becomes increasingly rigid for women as their social contacts’ socioeconomic status increases, men may experience more social pressure to prove they are masculine breadwinners than concern about excess weight and weight control. So they may feel less inclined to practice a weight-conscious lifestyle, such as dieting or exercising, than women.
“The implication here is that body weight norms are gendered, and one’s network reinforces it,” Song says. “So social contacts’ socioeconomic status produces opposite effects for men and women.”
It’s a dynamic Song sees every day. “One day I went to have lunch with my colleague, and I ordered salad and he ordered a big sandwich and we were talking about my project, and I said, ‘Look, you’re a professor with a PhD, I’m a professor with a PhD, but you are a man and I am a woman, so you’re less concerned about the consequences of what you eat, and I’m more concerned,'” she says. “So we could see the network and the gender interacting there.”
The study appears in the journal Sociological Perspectives.
Source: Vanderbilt University