Saturday, October 26, 2019
Essay --
What Is a ââ¬Å"Realâ⬠Woman? Criticism of Existing Body Positive Advertising Thinner and thinner models are being used in combination with Photoshop, creating an impossible beauty ideal that is affecting the physical and emotional health of women in our society. The typical fashion model presented in advertisements has protruding hip bones and an androgynous body shape due to dangerously low body fat. They are slimmed and smoothed further in images by the use of Photoshop. The documentary MissRepresentation points out, ââ¬Å"you never see a photograph in the media of a woman considered beautiful that hasnââ¬â¢t been digitally altered to make her absolutely inhumanely perfectâ⬠. Since the 1980ââ¬â¢s, the quest to be thin has shifted from eliminating excess weight to eliminating bulges, or flesh that wiggles (ââ¬Å"Slender Bodyâ⬠191). It is no longer enough to be thin. The ideal body is also toned, bolted down, and maintains ââ¬Å"firm bodily marginsâ⬠(ââ¬Å"Slender Bodyâ⬠191). This nearly impossible beauty standard is reflected and enforced by advertisements showing emaciated models selling products to smooth out bumps, reduce wrinkles, or tone the body. The mediaââ¬â¢s depiction of female bodies has a detrimental influence on womenââ¬â¢s perception of themselves and has come under fire in recent years. Girls growing up in our media soaked culture internalize societyââ¬â¢s ever-thinning standard of beauty, believing that they can never be slender enough. The negative effect of the media has been linked to the spread of eating disorders (ââ¬Å"Never Just Picturesâ⬠, Thompson). This has led to a public outcry against impossibly thin, airbrushed models and a demand for more honest advertising. The movement toward ââ¬Å"body positiveâ⬠advertising is a response to the damaging eff... ...ove, it still rejects older and disabled women as beautiful. It also renders women with imperfect skin or tattoos as unacceptable. Although Skinnygirl claims to show the average woman in their advertisement, they still only represent a limited demographic. Although presented as body positive, Dove, M&S and Skinnygirlââ¬â¢s advertising campaigns using ââ¬Å"real womenâ⬠still subscribe to existing beauty standards to maintain firm body margins and reject certain body types as beautiful. Even if well intentioned, advertising for beauty products is inherently not a good place to start the body positive movement because it relies on the consumer feeling like they need to improve themselves to buy the product. Instead of focusing on how to make ââ¬Å"ordinaryâ⬠women feel beautiful, the focus should shift away from the body. Women should not feel as if their beauty is their self worth.
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