Media

Taylor Swift’s impact on fans’ body image attitudes mostly positive, research shows

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First study on the health effects of Taylor Swift’s celebrity finds an overall positive influence on fans’ attitudes on body image and disordered eating

Photo credit: Alex Brewer, Hits Different: A Taylor Swift Podcast

by University of Vermont

Taylor Swift’s past struggles with body image, disordered eating, and body objectification have had an overall positive influence on her fans’ attitudes on these issues, a new study from University of Vermont (UVM) researchers finds.

The new research, published in journal Social Science & Medicineanalyzed the top 200 TikTok and Reddit posts—including over 8,300 online comments—about Taylor Swift, eating disorders, and body image to determine the impact of Swift’s disclosures about her past eating disorder on her fans.

“Our findings suggest that fans who felt highly connected to Swift were influenced to positively change their behaviors or attitudes around eating or their body image because of Swift’s disclosures and messages in her music,” says Associate Prof. Lizzy Pope of UVM Nutrition and Food Sciences Department, a registered dietitian nutritionist. 

“Fans seemed to take inspiration from the fact that Swift had recovered from disordered eating and subsequently appeared to be thriving,” adds Kelsey Rose, a UVM Clinical Assistant Professor and registered dietitian nutritionist who specializes in eating disorder treatment.

Analyzing thousands of online comments, researchers identified several positive themes—the biggest being that fans saw Swift as a role model for eating disorder recovery and used Swift’s story or her art to inspire their own recoveries. 

Several Swift songs refer to disordered eating or body image pressures. Swift has also talked candidly about her struggles around disordered eating, body image, and body objectification in her 2020 film, Miss Americana. These disclosures are unique in that they call into question societal norms that perpetuate diet culture which can be driven by celebrity culture, the researchers say. 

Swift’s transparency helped to decrease stigma around eating disorders among her fans, the researchers say. This is important because other research has shown that stigma-related shame can decrease help-seeking behaviors and negatively impact health outcomes.

However, despite Swifts overall positive effect, fans often continued to objectify Swift’s body and researchers found conflicted discourse regarding Swift’s artistic decision to display the word “fat” on a scale in her video for “Anti-Hero.”

Even when fans were praising Swift, sometimes they would perpetuate harms around the societal idea of thinness. “Although in Miss Americana Swift says I’m so sick of being objectified, and it’s driven me to disordered eating, the fans were still commenting on her body. Even if it was meant to be positive, fans would still comment, which means that they didn’t completely internalize her message of, ‘please do not comment on people’s bodies anymore,’” said Pope, whose research has previously found that TikTok perpetuates toxic diet culture among teens and young adults. The authors found that even when fans meant to defend Swift, they often said things such as, “She’s gained weight, she looks so happy and healthy now” objectifying her further.

Surrounded by students who idolize Swift and are vulnerable to diet culture, Pope and Rose were inspired to explore the influence of Swift’s eating-related disclosures on her fans’ relationships with disordered eating, their own bodies, and diet culture. 

The study results show that Swift’s public disclosure of her own struggles with disordered eating and diet culture have empowered her fans, as well as illustrated the limitations of individual disclosures to address broader systemic issues like anti-fat bias. Importantly, fans of all body sizes self-identified in comments reflecting how Swift’s honesty had helped them with their own relationships with food/body. Swift’s Eras Tour currently has a cast of body diverse dancers, challenging the idea that expert dancers only come in one body size, the researchers say. 

The researchers are hopeful their research might encourage Swift and celebrities like her to use their influence on society.

“Taylor Swift can do more to change attitudes with a few sentences than we can do in our entire careers,” said Pope. “So, it’s important to study people that have that kind of impact. There is little doubt that if she chooses to be, Swift can be a powerful voice for health, wellness and more weight-inclusive practices that may move society closer to the idea of body liberation.”

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Categories: Media, Society & Culture

4 replies »

  1. I guess times have changed. For the life of me, I can’t see how anyone, especially young men, see Taylor Swift as attractive. My opinion has always been that she was very unattractive, and was cursed with a “horse face”. But whatever. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder I guess.

    Here’s what bothers me, from the first paragraph of this “news”:

    “Taylor Swift’s past struggles with body image, disordered eating, and body objectification have had an overall positive influence on her fans’ attitudes on these issues, a new study from University of Vermont (UVM) researchers finds.”

    So why does the current younger generation idolize Ms Swift, given her wide range of admitted “issues”? Those traits are certainly not those of any “role model”. Nor are they “admirable”. Rather, they reek of “virtue signaling”. Problem, response, solution anyone?

    And, of course, this “study” was conducted by UVM. With YOUR tax dollars, by the way. Do they not have better things to pursue and throw money at? Like, I don’t know, curing cancer? Cutting edge physics? Pre-med? Engineering? The life cycle of Eurasian Milfoil?

    And I haven’t even touched on how Ms Swift has most likely been “groomed” for her role. Reference Macauley Culkin, Michael Jackson, and P Diddy. Is that something to aspire to? To sell your soul and practice satanic rituals in your performances?

    I think not, but as usual, I guess I “don’t get it”.

  2. If one has eyes to see and ears to hear – the symbolism and false idol worship held up for mass consumption is what evil is and does. Taylor Swift, and many others like her past and present, signed contracts and sold their souls for fame and fortune. Bob Dylan admitted it years ago on CBS. Adrianna Grande confessed she is a witch. So, UVM endorsing such evil is pretty much outing themselves as an institution for evil – not suprised. I now wonder how many “Christians” will unyoke themselves and stand against it? Wake up!