http://m.good.is/post/the-upside-of-sexual-objectification/

The Upside of Sexual Objectification

NOVEMBER 14, 2011 BY AMANDA HESS : GOOD

When a woman takes off her clothes, does it change her mind? The theory of
sexual objectification says that the more we focus on a person's body, the
less we think of her brains. But a new study in the Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology attempts to establish the upside of an objectifying
gaze.

Sexual objectification can apply to anyone who's viewed physically instead
of mentally, but it's a phenomenon that predominantly affects women—one
sweeping study of magazine ads found that on the whole, "women’s bodies are
prominently displayed, whereas men are more often pictured by their faces."
The practice harms women both mentally and physically. Research shows that
a focus on the body at the exclusion of the mind is "linked with disordered
eating, cognitive distraction, depression, and even self harm." Women who
are subjected to "a long look up and down from a man" go on to perform
"worse at a math exam."

But researchers Kurt Gray, Joshua Knobe, Mark Sheskin, Paul Bloom, and Lisa
Feldman Barrett are challenging the idea that objectification is all bad.
They asked study participants to assess a selection of men and women in
various states of undress to determine how clothing affects their view of a
subject's mental capabilities. Then, they asked the subjects to administer
electrical shocks to both clothed and shirtless people to assess their
perception of the subjects' capability to feel. The researchers found that
focusing on a person's body does not strictly "de-mentalize" her, but
rather "redistributes" our perception of her faculties. Objectified people
are perceived to be experiencers, not actors. When we perceive a woman
through her body, she appears "more capable of pain, pleasure, desire,
sensation, and emotion but lacking in agency."

The mind-body divide points to the underpinnings of the human moral
universe. The more agency a person has, the more we hold them responsible
when they hurt others. And the more they're capable of feeling, the more we
feel responsible for protecting them from harm. The researchers claim,
then, that objectified people—who can't do much, but can feel deeply—"may
have more moral status, not less." They list this as one of the potential
"positive aspects" of objectification, in that it "may lead others to
protect this person from additional pain."

In fact, the research speaks less to the upside of sexual objectification
and more to the versatility of its downsides. Seeing people as bodies
instead of minds can manifest itself as either hostile or paternal
sexism—women are either too dim to think for themselves, or too sensitive
to take care of themselves. Both serve to increase a man's power over them.

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