Volume 38, Numbers 11-12, 1025-1048, DOI: 10.1023/A:1018830727244

Gender and Age Patterns in Emotional Expression, Body Image, and Self-Esteem: A Qualitative Analysis

Mary Polce-Lynch, Barbara J. Myers, Christopher T. Kilmartin, Renate Forssmann-Falck and Wendy Kliewer

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Abstract

This qualitative study used written narrativesto examine gender and age patterns in body image,emotional expression, and self-esteem for a total of 209boys and girls in the fifth, eighth, and twelfth grades. Seventy-six percent of the sample wasCaucasian, 18% African-American, 5% Asian-American, and.5% Hispanic. A major finding indicates that boysrestrict emotional expression from early adolescence through late adolescence, while girls increaseemotional expression during the same age period. Anothermajor finding suggests that girls in late childhood andadolescence are both more negatively and more positively influenced than boys by body image.Both boys' and girls' feelings about themselves areprimarily influenced in gender-stereotypedways.

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