Postdigital Bodies: Young People’s Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Contextualising the Postdigital Body: Body Shaming, Sexual Shaming and Social Media Research
3. Methodology
4. Research Findings
4.1. Increased Engagement with Algorithmic Body Feeds
Lyla: During lockdown… you’d see these videos that’s like, “Oh, my new fitness plan has just been released, go and follow it”, and then you’d look at the comments and everyone’s doing it and then sometimes you’d send it to your group chat and be like, “Are any of you doing this? I know some of my friends, they went out in the morning before class at 6 am and did runs”, meanwhile I was just in bed and I was like, “Right”.
Liz: TikTok for instance, if there’s a video you could try and avoid all of that but you can’t control what comes up next. You could be trying to totally avoid it and just focus on yourself but if you see a video come up you can’t help but see it because you can’t say no before knowing it was there. You can’t help what comes up on your view page so sometimes you’ll see stuff that you’re like, “Oh, I wish I didn’t actually see that online because that’s just made me feel worse”.
Elsie: It’s an algorithm. Once you like one of the videos, you’re going to get two more. And once you like those videos, you’re going to get four more, and it just doubles. I mainly see positive videos, but I’ve been on some other friends’ accounts and TikTok, say, if you had an eating disorder, it would post you a lot of eating disorder content. And not positive. Negative. It’s a rather negative app.
Jonny: Girls are more affected, because they think they need to look like that, otherwise they’re not good enough… it starts at a younger age with girls … I don’t think I’ve ever really heard a girl say, “I love how I look. I’m confident in my own body”.
4.2. The Perils of ‘Body Positivity’: Witnessing Hateful Comments and Backlash on Viral Posts
Sam: I remember one day I was feeling really bad and then I saw this picture and was like, “Bloating is normal”. I was like, “Oh, it’s not just me. Everyone does it”. It was kind of normalised and it makes you feel better.
Tiffany: You’ll get girls who have big boobs, basically, and their whole comments are like, ‘Oh yeah, she’s got her boobs out’, ‘Someone’s down on followers’, all that sort of thing.
Int: Will these be people you know who are posting these videos or the comments?
Solange: I guess mainly famous people, I think, the famous people are in the videos, or famous TikTok people, and then just normal random people commenting on it.
4.3. Experiencing Postdigital Body Shaming
4.3.1. Hegemonic Cis-Gendered Heterosexual Masculinities, Gender Binaries and Policing Non-Normative Bodies
“plastering it everywhere…wearing pride flags 24/7, purposely heightening your voice, your actions and your movements and your words are overexaggerated massively”.
I’ve had quite racist comments, I’ve had body-shaming comments. And because I’m disabled, I get a lot of comments about that as well. But that’s kind of why I’m scared to post online, because I’m scared people will start coming on there and saying things as well.
4.3.2. Risky Bodies: Fit or Shit Ratings, Slut Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse
Amanda: comment what they find attractive about them and not attractive.
Jane: Excuse my language but they would say ’fit or shit’, and if you’re fit they will rate how good you are, if you’re shit then no.
Amanda: Yeah. A score out of 10
Molly: there was an account going round, and my best friend was put on there… it was saying how ugly she was.
Sonia: The caption would be “rate this person out of 10, 1 being ugly and 10 being amazing”, and then the people would comment. …It would start off with rating, and then it would go onto mean comments. It’s happened to people in this school.
Thea: I think it was two lessons ago in science when someone was like her style and dressing is weird, she looks weird, it’s not nice. She should get some proper clothes, she’s dressed like a slut. She’s not covering herself, she’s going to get raped if she keeps getting it on. Your clothes don’t determine if you’re going to get raped or not. I think that teachers or people just around the world that teach sex education could be any person really to keep it in their pants, you shouldn’t rape someone based on what they’re wearing. I don’t think you should be slut shamed either. Loads of comments like she has her arse out for England. What’s that got to do with you, if she wants to have it out let her have it out, it’s not your problem is it? She’s not affecting you, is she?
Int: Who was making these comments in your science class?
Lorri: Mainly boys at our school. Girls can say it too. Girls are no better than boys to be honest. But you can get these girls who slut shame other girls, and these boys who agree. I think the only reason girls do it in front of boys is because they want to look cool… [in front of] their boyfriends, sneaky links… whatever…
Daphne: I’ve been slut shamed online and what I was wearing wasn’t even revealing, it was just a little summer dress type thing. And I deleted the post because I didn’t want that sort of attention that I was getting. … It was on Instagram and it was someone who I used to be friends with [who] messaged me … this really horrible comment that I don’t really want to repeat. And it made me feel awful and I blocked the person, I deleted the post because it just made me feel so awful. And it really sucked because I considered them a good friend and then we sort of like, over the months we just stopped talking to each other…
Michelle: I remember in year nine art a certain boy showing me regularly girls’ nudes that he’d got. He’d be like, ‘Look how saggy her tits are’, and stuff like that, and it’s all like a massive joke. But then when he was begging for it, I’m sure it wasn’t funny.
Rosie: But then you think of the poor girl who’s then getting rinsed behind her back for her literal underage naked body. How fucked up is that?
Alex: This guy sent the nudes to a girl, and the girl had obviously somehow obtained that picture and saved it to her phone, and then that got sent round most of the girls really, and he got shamed for having a small penis.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Ringrose, J.; Milne, B.; Horeck, T.; Mendes, K. Postdigital Bodies: Young People’s Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England. Youth 2024, 4, 1058-1075. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030066
Ringrose J, Milne B, Horeck T, Mendes K. Postdigital Bodies: Young People’s Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England. Youth. 2024; 4(3):1058-1075. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030066
Chicago/Turabian StyleRingrose, Jessica, Betsy Milne, Tanya Horeck, and Kaitlynn Mendes. 2024. "Postdigital Bodies: Young People’s Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England" Youth 4, no. 3: 1058-1075. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030066
APA StyleRingrose, J., Milne, B., Horeck, T., & Mendes, K. (2024). Postdigital Bodies: Young People’s Experiences of Algorithmic, Tech-Facilitated Body Shaming and Image-Based Sexual Abuse during and after the COVID-19 Pandemic in England. Youth, 4(3), 1058-1075. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030066