Courtesy Stigma and the Consequences of Deviance [View all]
This blog post is only tangentially about body image but I thought it was interesting from the perspective of social pressure to conform to narrow body type norms.
http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2014/02/04/courtesy-stigma-and-the-consequences-of-deviance/
Courtesy Stigma and the Consequences of Deviance
by Lisa Wade, PhD, Feb 4, 2014, at 09:00 am
In 2010 a scandal that erupted when designer Mark Fast decided to use four plus-size models (US sizes 8-10) in his catwalk show at London Fashion Week. Protesting his decision, his stylist and creative director quit, leaving him just three days to find replacements.
The incident is a great example of how even relatively powerful figures (e.g., designers with catwalk shows) often have to pay a price for deviating from cultural rules. Designers are often criticized for only hiring waif-like models, but this shows that they dont get to do whatever they like without consequences.
While its easy to condemn Fasts stylist and creative director for walking out on him, the truth is that even being associated with deviance can bring consequences. Sociologist Erving Goffman introduced the idea of the courtesy stigma to refer to the stigma that attaches to those who are merely associated with a stigmatized person. A recent Greys Anatomy episode dealt with exactly this idea in a story about the reaction to an attractive blonde married to an obese man. Her willingness to stay with such a person was a source of curiosity and disbelief. Similarly, siblings of the mentally ill or mothers of children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder might suffer courtesy stigma when people wonder if the mental illness is genetic or the parenting is bad, respectively...