Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Six Annotated Bibliographies: Eating Disorders and the Media
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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 54 page paper comprises 6 annotated bibliographies about eating disorders and the media.
Page Count:
54 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HV6anbib.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
brainwashing on this subject has been so successful that a substantial number of young women, and some men, have developed eating disorders, making themselves sick and in some cases risking
their lives to obtain the "perfect" body that the media says they must have. The brainwashing has been so thorough that these people dont even stop to look at the
facts, which are that the "perfect" celebrities they so hope to emulate have stylists, dressers, personal trainers and hours of time to spend in the gym to get that look.
It also ignores the fact that photos are airbrushed, retouched, or otherwise altered to disguise body flaws. The ideals of beauty being given to the public by the media are
simply not attainable for most people, no matter how hard they try, because the images are not real. This paper is not an essay in the tradition sense, but
a compilation of six annotated bibliographies that deal with the subject of the way the media has handled this subject. There wont be any further annotation, except to note were
the bibliography was found; the search terms used were "annotated bibliography +eating disorders +media". PLEASE NOTE: Formatting is not consistent among these bibliographies; students will need to format items
they use according to the style of their paper. First Bibliography: URL: http://www.unc.edu/~bbeddow/annotatedbibliography.pdf Eating Disorders Among Young Women: An Annotated Bibliography Belangee, Susan E. and others,
"Exploring the Relationships Between Lifestyle Personality Attributes and Eating Disorder Symptoms and Behaviors in a Non-clinical Population," Journal of Individual Psychology 59, no. 4 (2003): 461-475. This article details
a study of non-clinical disordered eating patterns, a subject that has been given little attention up to this time. The results show that like those clinically diagnosed as anorexic or
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