Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Women, Beauty and Self-Esteem Essay -- Body Image & Self Esteem
Ambrose Bierce (1958) once wrote, ââ¬Å"To men a man is but a mind. Who cares what face he carries or what he wears? But womanââ¬â¢s body is the woman.â⬠Despite the societal changes achieved since Bierceââ¬â¢s time, his statement remains true. Since the height of the feminist movement in the early 1970s, women have spent more money than ever before on products and treatments designed to make them beautiful. Cosmetic sales have increased annually to reach $18 billion in 1987 (ââ¬Å"Ignoring the economy. . . ,â⬠1989), sales of womenââ¬â¢s clothing averaged $103 billion per month in 1990 (personal communication, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, 1992), dieting has become a $30-billion-per-year industry (Stoffel, 1989), and women spent $1.2 billion on cosmetic surgery in 1990 (personal communication, American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons, 1992). The importance of beauty has apparently increased even as women are reaching for personal freedoms and economic rights undreamed of by our grandmothers. The emphasis on beauty may be a way to hold onto a feminine image while shedding feminine roles. Attractiveness is prerequisite for femininity but not for masculinity (Freedman, 1986). The word beauty always refers to the female body. Attractive male bodies are described as ââ¬Å"handsome,â⬠a word derived from ââ¬Å"handâ⬠that refers as much to action as appearance (Freedman, 1986). Qualities of achieveà ment and strength accompany the term handsome, such attributes are rarely employed in the description of attractive women and certainly do not accomà pany the term beauty, which refers only to a decorative quality. Men are instruà mental, women are ornamental. Beauty is a most elusive commodity. Ideas of what is beautiful vary across cultures and change ... .... Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 10, 129-38. Stoffel, Jennifer. (1989, November 26). Whatââ¬â¢s new in weight control: A market mushrooms as motivations change. New York Times, p. C17. Thompson, J. Kevin. (1986, April). Larger than life. Psychology Today, pp. 41-44. Walker, Alice. (1990). Beauty: When the other dancer is the self. In Evelyn C. White (Ed.), The black womenââ¬â¢s health book: Speaking for ourselves (pp. 280-87). Seattle: Seal Press. Walster, Elaine, Aronson, Vera, Abrahams, Darcy, & Rottman, Leon. (1966). Importance of physical attractiveness in dating behavior. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4, 508-16. Wernick, Mark, & Manaster, Guy J. (1984). Age and the perception of age and attractiveness. Gerontologist, 24, 408-14. Williams, Juanita H. (1985). Psychology of women: Behavior in a biosocial context. New York: Norton.
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