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Ageing & Society (2002), 22 : 751-773 Cambridge University Press
Copyright © 2002 Cambridge University Press
doi:10.1017/S0144686X02008905
Published online by Cambridge University Press 12 Dec 2002


Older women's perceptions of ideal body weights: the tensions between health and appearance motivations for weight loss


LAURA HURD  CLARKE  a1 c1
a1 School of Social Work and Family Studies, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.

Abstract

This paper explores older women's evaluations of their weight as well as the perceived merits and detriments of weight gain and weight loss in later life. Using data from semi-structured interviews with 22 community-dwelling women aged 61 to 92 years, I examine the meanings that the women attribute to dieting, desired body weights and obesity. The women frequently offer unsolicited accounts for why they have gained or lost weight over time, and disclose their perceptions of and reasons for needing to alter their current body weights. I probe the tensions between weight loss for health concerns versus appearance goals. The women express dissatisfaction with their weight gain in terms of their physical appearance. However, they also tend to describe the need to lose weight in terms of health risks and benefits rather than in terms of approximating the beauty ideal or achieving a desired body size and shape. Health tends to be described as a valid justification for being concerned with one's weight, while an appearance orientation is deemed to be indicative of vanity. Many of the women suggest that while the health benefits of weight loss are often the stated reason for losing weight, the perceived appearance dividends are the key motivation behind altering one's body weight in later life.

(Accepted June 5 2002)


Key Words: women; ageing; body; weight; health; appearance.

Correspondence:
c1 Address for correspondence: Laura Hurd Clarke, School of Social Work and Family Studies, University of British Columbia, 2080 West Mall, Vancouver, Canada V6T 2G3 e-mail: lcclarke@interchange.ubc.ca


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