Relation of attitude toward body elimination to parenting style and attitude toward the body

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Abstract

The purpose was to estimate the relation of attitude toward body elimination in 93 college students (27 men and 66 women), to authoritarian personality features, participants' perception of their mothers' parenting style, and attitudes toward cleanliness, sex, and family nudity. Subjects were administered the Body Elimination Attitude Scale, the Four-item F Scale, the Parental Authority Questionnaire Pertaining to Mothers, and the items "Sex is dirty," Cleanliness is next to godliness," and "Children should never see other family members nude." Larger scores for disgust toward body elimination were associated with authoritarian personality characteristics, being less likely to describe mother's parenting style as authoritative (open communication) and more likely to describe it as authoritarian and lower scores for tolerance for family nudity. Implications for further research were suggested.

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Corgiat, C. A., & Templer, D. I. (2003). Relation of attitude toward body elimination to parenting style and attitude toward the body. Psychological Reports, 92(2), 621–626. https://doi.org/10.2466/pr0.2003.92.2.621

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