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Plastic
Surgery: The New Beauty Norm?
By Kim Martin
This is a good topic to discuss especially now since the popularity of all the
make-over shows.
I have always been curious as to why people, mostly women, have
this idea that they are expected to look a certain way in order to "fit
in" with society.
We all would like to believe that quaint saying, "beauty is in the eye of
the beholder", but how true and meaningful is that phrase when the beholder
has been brainwashed, so to speak, into subscribing to the belief that beauty is
the artificial look we see on glamour mags, in TV commercials, and even in some
children's books?
For some time now, that image has consisted mainly of white
women and the "white standard of beauty".
I decided to take this question of plastic surgery and the search for beauty and
see how it can affect some women in the African-American community. According to
the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, African-Americans make up only 6% of
plastic surgery patients. Why is this? Do African-American women have a more
positive self/body image or is it that many cannot afford it? And for the 6% who
do have surgery, to which standard of beauty were they trying to aspire?
I chose to start my search for the white standard of beauty in 1960. I chose
that year because at the time, a TV show was airing that sought to teach moral
and societal lessons through fantastical tales. Two episodes of this show were
very telling and prophetic, and they both dealt with how society viewed beauty
and the expectations placed on women to be "beautiful". That show was,
The Twilight Zone.
Beauty in 1960... Rod Serling offered us a tale of beauties and beasts in
episode #42 entitled: Eye of the Beholder. Here's a brief synopsis of the show I
found at The Twilight Zone Guide: Janet Tyler anxiously awaits the outcome of
her latest surgery. Janet, who's abnormal face has made her an outcast, has had
her eleventh hospital visit - the maximum allowed by the State. If it didn't
succeed, she will be sent to live in a village where others of her kind are
segregated. As her bandages are removed, she is revealed to be very beautiful.
The doctor draws back in horror. As the lights come on we see the others, their
faces are misshapen and deformed. As Janet runs from her room crying, she runs
into another of her kind, a handsome man named Walter Smith. He is in charge of
an outcast village, and he assures her that she will eventually feel she
belongs. He tells her to remember the old saying: "Beauty is in the eye of
the beholder." Although the show was filmed in black and white, we can
clearly see that Ms. Tyler is Caucasian. The doctors appear to have darker skin,
nevertheless, the idea here was that the viewers empathized with Ms. Tyler
because she was the classic blonde, slender beauty commonly seen in 1960's
fashion magazines. As the show closes, the narrator speaks: "Now the
questions that come to mind. Where is this place and when is it, what kind of
world where ugliness is the norm and beauty the deviation from that norm? The
answer is, it doesn't make any difference. Because the old saying happens to be
true. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, in this year or a hundred years
hence, on this planet or wherever there is human life, perhaps out among the
stars. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Lesson to be learned...in the
Twilight Zone."
1964: The Standard Continues Episode #137, in Season Five, is called,
"Number Twelve Looks Just Like You", and was adapted by a short story
called "The Beautiful People". In this episode, we meet Marilyn, a
young woman who is about to go through a rite of passage in her community. This
rite is called "The Transformation" and it requires citizens to choose
among several models of bodies into which they will be transformed. The message
here is that this society only sees one standard of beauty and that one will not
be happy unless they look and act just like everyone else. Opening Narration:
"Given the chance, what young girl wouldn't happily exchange a plain face
for a lovely one? What girl could refuse the opportunity to be beautiful? For
want of a better estimate, let's call it the year 2000. At any rate, imagine a
time in the future when science has developed a means of giving everyone the
face and body he dreams of. It may not happen tomorrow--but it happens now, in
the Twilight Zone."
Once again, the beautiful people are all white and we don't see any women or men
of color. What was this episode trying to tell black women about beauty? The
closing narration: Portrait of a young lady in love--with herself. Improbable?
Perhaps. But in an age of plastic surgery, body building, and an infinity of
cosmetics, let us hesitate to say impossible. These and other strange blessings
may be waiting in the future--which after all, is the Twilight Zone."
Beauty 40 Years Later
Some aspects of beauty standards have changed, but not much. We do see more
black models and beautiful black women, but when you look at the majority of the
more famous ones, (Tyra, Halle, Janet, Vanessa Williams, Beyonce, a few of whom
have had plastic surgery, on their noses and other body parts), you can see
straight away that they have many Caucasian attributes: small, pinched noses,
lighter complexion, lighter eyes, straight, lightly colored hair. It is rare
that you will see a model with very dark skin, a tight afro, wide, round, larger
nose, and full, large lips. Flip through any issue of Vogue or Glamour and look
for that image I just described. Then look for the first image I described.
So, are black women trying to aspire to the white standard of beauty when they
seek plastic surgery?
According to Cynthia Winston, assistant professor of psychology at Howard
University in Washington, D.C., We really don't know much about how blacks are
influenced. Most of the research focuses on perceptions related to skin color.
Foe most African-Americans, perception can be shaped by their environment. For
example, an African-American woman growing up in an all-white neighborhood in
Nebraska may be more likely than an African-American woman raised in inner-city
Detroit to compare herself with white images of beauty.
(Source: African-American Women & Plastic Surgery: Self-Improvement or
Self-Hatred? By Angela D. Johnson, Sept. 2, 2003)
Now What?
I suppose, it all comes down to how one feels inside about themselves. But there
is this viscous cycle of doubt that women constantly face so it's often hard to
reconcile your inner voices with the outside images thrown at you everyday. Many
women buy into the trends and fashions that dictate beauty. TV shows and print
ads abound with images of sexy women. Fitness clubs persuade women to join not
so they will lower their risk of heart disease, but so they will aspire to be
beautiful on the outside. No one tries to sell things that will help them on the
inside.
In the end, you can look at all of this and say that there will always be
standards of beauty and those who aspire to live up those standards, and those
wanting to make a profit off those standards (cosmetic companies, ad agencies,
modeling agencies, fashion designers, plastic surgeons, psychotherapists). The
media portrays what people want to see and apparently, it's sex and
"beauty".
Ms. Martin currently
resides in sunny Southern California with her son. When she's not writing, she
works part-time as a preschool teacher where she hopes to help all children
develop positive self and body images.
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