Cassandra

To many directions!

 Posted by on Sun, 10/2 at 11:58pm  ideas  No Responses »
Oct 022016
 

As I’ve been reading articles and viewing videos I have come to a realization that my topic on beauty image has a lot of sub topics that i can talk about in my paper. I think this is going to be my climb to the top of the mountain. I  have always had a little problem with organization in my papers  (and when this happens i tend to ramble a lot) and just thinking about all of the subtopics and the multiple directions that my paper can turn to is freaking me out a little or I should say a lot! This sucks cause I am very passionate about this subject and I really want to do an amazing job!

subtopics:

-beauty pageants vs. beauty image

-fashion vs. beauty image

-gender vs.beauty image

-social media vs. beauty image

-media vs. beauty image

-time vs. beauty image

-celebrities vs. beauty image

-beauty in the workplace regarding capabilities and how people are treated

-beauty in school

-make up  and beauty

Is beauty image the correct term???? Body/ Beauty standards? I need help! Lol

 

Moving forward the articles that I read about this week really made me think about how society evolves. Like why do people think that beauty correlates with size and color. Why is someones body type enough to judge their capabilities? Like that sucks! This goes on everyday and everywhere and I’m not sure that it will ever stop.

To Thick To Win

 Posted by on Sun, 10/2 at 11:31pm  reading  No Responses »
Oct 022016
 

          When you hear the words model or athlete what embodiment comes to mind? Do you see a beautiful, young and thin woman? Do you picture a strong, tall and built man? What if the model or athlete that you just portrayed in your mind was the polar opposite of what you just imagined. Would you still consider them a model or an athlete? My readings this week pertained to this issue. 

According to The DailyMail, two weeks ago Paola Torrente, a twenty-two year old model competed for the title of Miss Italy 2016. However Paola was different in the eyes of the beauty pageant world. She is known as the term “plus size” in the beauty industry. Despite of all the support she had Torrente didn’t win the title of Miss Italy. She did however win second place to which she responded “Despite being the runner up I still feel like a winner!” In spite of all of the positive support surrounding Torrente, for portraying a more realistic body frame there were others who thought differently. One of them being a forty year old Croation model Nina Moric, who is only known for her appearance in a three minute music video. Nina wrote several  negative comments on her Instagram page concerning with Paola’s second place win. In her comments she mentions that  the only reason Torrente was able to obtain second place was out of political correctness. She goes on to say, “You have created organisations to defend people with too much flesh,” and “You have arrived to the point where we chose a Miss Italy who is too fat – and all in the name of sensitivity and acceptance of others.” Nina is not the only person who had theses thoughts. The mother of the third place winner of the completion said that Paola had no business competing in the mainstream event. She said that Paola being a size fourteen should have opted for a plus size beauty competition. To be honest when I look at Torrente’s picture I dont see “plus size” at all. This however does not take away from the fact that many people out there still associate the word beauty with size and even more sadly beauty with color.

When I hear the words beauty image my mind tends to correlate it with the word women. That is why this week I tried to find articles on body image that featured men as the main subject. Both Prince Fielder (baseball player) and Ben Cohen (rugby player) are male athletes who have been body shamed by the media and society. Prince Fielder was featured on ESPN’S Body Image issue. Once the magazine cover was released Fielder encountered many online trolls and negative body image comments. On a more positive note the article goes on to say that “Athletes’ bodies, just like those of us mere mortals, come in all shapes and sizes, and they can all be magnificent in their own ways.” When Ben Cohen was body shamed he was already retired. Pictures were released by the media of a shirtless Ben on vacation in Miami. It wasn’t long before people on social media started attacking Cohen for having put on a few extra pounds. In the article body confidence blogger Leyah Shanks says “There can be a tendency to forget or overlook how much of a problem negative body image in men exists and how it impacts lives. This article is feeding the incorrect idea that one can only be happy with one’s body when it is in said ‘perfect’ condition.”

The beauty and body standards that men and women are subjected on daily basis is to say the least very frightening. I believe that the way someone looks on the outside does not correlate with their capabilities to do anything and everything. Paola Torrente, Prince Fielder and Ben Cohen are all successful people who didn’t let their “thickness” prevent them form becoming winners.

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/07/23/mail-online-fat-shame-rugby-player-ben-cohen_n_7849460.html?1437641963&

https://thinkprogress.org/prince-fielder-and-the-beauty-of-espns-body-issue-5225d036b80b#.pxx8uossf

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3794133/Plus-size-model-comes-second-Miss-Italy-contest-despite-cruel-trolls-said-s-fat-beauty-queen.html

 

 

 

 

Age vs. Beauty: Mini Edition

 Posted by on Thu, 9/22 at 8:40pm  mini analysis  No Responses »
Sep 222016
 

         Before and after pictures usually convey people who have undergone a major transformation. Most likely a before and after photograph will consist of an altering cosmetic procedure or a dramatic change in weight (majority of which will have young adults/adults as the main subject). About thirty minutes ago I typed in negative body image on Google and one of the result images that came up was a before and after photograph of a female child. The visual of the image was a young girl (between the age of nine to eleven) and it displayed the child before and after she “glamorized” herself. Now if the subject of the image were to have been the before and after of a child with an improvement on a medical condition I am not sure if I would have been as confounded as I am now. This image really caught my eye because it demonstrates how early on young girls are pushed into the world of beauty. 

          I for one really enjoy make up and fashion. I however was not allowed to wear make up until my freshman year in high school. This made me question, is there an appropriate age for “glam?” Does the age in when one starts wearing make up change your self beauty image? Is there any correlation between negative body/beauty image and make up. Time is forever changing and in present day I have noticed younger girls with full faces of make up on. Every time I see a child wearing make up I am unsure as to how I should feel. Am I suppose to freak out because a nine year old child now looks eighteen! Or should I see it as normal because they are only applying make up on a child for the purpose of a beauty competition (are they really though). Does the young girl in the before and after photograph really feel as pretty without all of the make up on? Does she still feel beautiful when her hair isn’t as big and full of hair spray? How does this image convey the meaning of beauty to other young girls?

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          If I were to ask a young girl or boy which image is the girl most pretty I would expect for their answer to be, “the girl looks most pretty in the before picture.” However I’m not to sure that this would be the answer in today’s youth. The more I look at this picture the more I feel like make up does not belong on children.  I think that images like this one distort the perception of beauty and the representation of it amongst children. 

  

 

 

Pretty Hurts

 Posted by on Tue, 9/13 at 9:34pm  Uncategorized  No Responses »
Sep 132016
 

          As I was growing up body and beauty image was an aspect in life that I really struggled with. This problem emerged from an incident that happened in middle school. I was in gym class when a girl classmate of mine mentioned “you are really pretty for a big girl.” In my head I thought “really pretty for a big girl” was that a compliment or an offense? Like does my body size constitute my level of prettiness? Are you saying that if I was a thinner person then I would be more beautiful? That day my level of self esteem took a plummeting downfall and it would take years for me to get it back. I would be lying if I said that those words don’t creep up in my memory sometimes. However I now know that they don’t define my worth as a person. Unfortunately I am not alone in this torment that is body image.  According to Statistic Brain 91% of women are unhappy with their bodies.

          Women have always had a sort of pressure to look a certain way in order to be thought of as pretty. My question is what makes someone pretty? The media glamorizes thin bodies and perfect skin. Pretty in the media is defined as a standard height and size but where is everyone else on the “pretty” spectrum. It isn’t until recently that the term “curvy” and “plus size” have been brought to light. Even though “curvy” is what everyone is talking about we are still hesitant in letting it in our definition of beauty.

          Their are many aspects in our lives that distort our body and beauty image. Did you know that Barbie is one of them. Yes, Barbie, a toy that every little girl has played with and looked up to. According to a story published by Refinery 29 on my Snapchat (yes I still have social media) girls who played with a traditional Barbie reported a higher dissatisfaction with their own bodies opposed to the girls who played with the new, tall, and curvy Barbies. It is very sad to read about young girls being unhappy with themselves. However girls are not the only ones who suffer from body image issues. Boys can also be sucked into this problem. The pediatrics journal published that 40% of boys exercise regularly and 90% exercise occasionally all with the propose to bulk up.

          Whether you are a boy or a girl being told that you are not pretty or handsome enough hurts the same.  Today many artist have made it their platform to try and break down these beauty and body standards. Beyonce and Colbie Caillat are among these artist that sing about the struggles with beauty and body image. Along with these artist more people are getting involved and making it their mission to help those that are battling with body image. Below are couple links and videos that will help you learn more about these issues.

 

http://www.medicaldaily.com/history-body-image-america-how-ideal-female-and-male-body-has-changed-over-time-360492

http://www.refinery29.com/2016/09/122795/barbie-body-image-effects

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peggy-drexler/beauty-and-the-boy-the-im_b_2462766.html

https://youtu.be/GXoZLPSw8U8

https://youtu.be/0Lz6tYh4esY

https://youtu.be/LXXQLa-5n5w