Abstract

The article examines the relationship between media (and health literacy), self-representation, and nutritional behavior of girls who receive nutrition-related content on Instagram. Analyzing this relationship is important because social networks like Instagram can be used as platforms to promote one’s nutritional behavior as expression of personality and to interact with others. Countless meal images are posted, and reach a large number of users. With its visual characteristics, Instagram seems predestined for nutrition-related self-representation. Media literacy, one way of raising young people’s awareness of the risks of media use, encompasses the skills knowledge, evaluation, and action. If media literacy is transferred to the field of health communication, intersections become apparent. Media literacy is understood as a necessary ability to distinguish credible health information from non-credible health information. Both media and health literacy include the skills knowledge, evaluation, and action. Based on 15 qualitative interviews with girls in the age of 13 to 19, results show the relevance of media and health literacy for nutritional behavior. The girls own background information to classify and evaluate received content. They know that content on Instagram is staged and they reflect about negative effects of staged images. However, these images inspire them for their self-representation and nutritional behavior. They adapt what they see into their own eating habits, adopt trends, and thus act against their knowledge of negative consequences to reach the socially expected body image.

Highlights

  • This article examines the relationship between media and health literacy, self-representation, and the nutritional behavior of girls who receive nutrition-related content on Instagram

  • The results show the relevance of media and health literacy in the nutritional behavior of adolescent girls

  • The importance of parents as the first socialization agent and of young people themselves in terms of self-socialization becomes clear. Their eating behavior is influenced by their parents, there are differences in the nutritional information (Maag, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

This article examines the relationship between media and health literacy, self-representation, and the nutritional behavior of girls who receive nutrition-related content on Instagram. Analyzing this relationship is important for several reasons: first, social networks, such as Instagram, can be used as platforms to promote one’s nutritional behavior as an expression of one’s personality and to interact with others. Instagram seems predestined for users’ nutrition-related self-representation. As adolescents are in the process of developing their personalities (Hurrelmann, 1990) and body consciousness through using media (Havighurst, 1956), social media serves as a “space for experience and a source of orientation” The reception of social media content supports adolescents in forming

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