It also contributes to precocious sexualization by encouraging flirtatious behavior in the pageants; teaching these girls to be objects for others’ pleasures. These children are learning that acting sexy will get others’ attention, a problem young girls are having even though it is not their intention to come across with that connotation. He blames reality T.V. for making these girls focus more on physical appearance rather than their self – esteem. Even though pageant life can be relentless according to Hollandsworth, in section five, he blames the mothers and pageant agents for depriving these pageant girls from having a so call “normal child life.” He also presents the reader with the question of who are these girls doing pageants for? For themselves or their mothers? These pageants according to Hollandsworth present a Kate Middleton moment to live the princess story for both the mothers and children. He also makes a contrast of the simple life of Eden versus her celebrity life and the plenty of criticism she receives because she wants to be a star. He also talks about the financial cost Eden’s parents are undergoing for her to experience life outside Taylor, Arkansas. Hollandsworth ends up the article by presenting contestant’s comments such as,…
In the other, Susan shares her perspective of all the struggles women go through to look skinny and beautiful like the media portrays them to be. This essay will show how Pigott proved her point and how Susan established hers and show a comparison of how both writers justified their thoughts in their essays. Catherine Pigott shares her personal story to help the readers understand her thought and…
This book will teach the generations to come that if you want to be beautiful you’ll have to be a whole new person, a photo shopped fake. Today in advertisements and magazines we are presented with beautiful images of men and women, girls and boys. We are presented with fake pictures, imaginary pictures, something that will never happen, but we are totally fooled into believing that true beauty is what’s presented in magazines and advertisements. This book teaches us that our imperfections make us beautiful, that for beauty you lose your people, and you’ll regret it. The imagination of being perfect is told in someone else’s point of view. Our society is proven to believe that a person with a combination of qualities that pleases others is beautiful, but your imperfections are what make you beautiful. As Marilyn Monroe said “Imperfection is beauty. Madness is genius, and it’s better to be absolutely ridiculous than absolutely boring.” Tally is taught in The Smoke, that alongside the surgery, “uglies” face tiny complications from the anaesthetic used in the operation, tiny lesions in the brain that were barely visible. These lesions were basically a…
Shakespeare’s sonnet 130, “My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun” and Pablo Neruda’s “My ugly love” are popularly known to describe beauty in a way hardly anyone would write: through the truth. It’s a common fact that modern lovers and poets speak or write of their beloved with what they and the audience would like to hear, with kind and breathtaking words and verses. Yet, Shakespeare and Neruda, honest men as they both were, chose to write about what love truly is, it matters most what’s on the inside rather than the outside. The theme of true beauty and love are found through Shakespeare and Neruda’s uses of imagery, structure, and tone.…
Over time, society changes as well as the people in that society. Today’s society is obsessed with looks, fashion, and glamour. Advertisements can be found everywhere you look for clothes, beauty products, diet pills, etc. Society nowadays judges people based on their looks more than anything, There is a strong belief that the attractive ones are more likely to succeed. People living in today’s society will often find themselves doing anything to achieve this “beauty” in order to “fit in” and be accepted by others. This problem is commonly found in today’s younger generation; mainly teenagers and young adults. They grow up with the belief that one must have looks over more important things such as personality, intelligence, and self belief; they lose their uniqueness.…
“The tragedy of these women is the tragedy of the civilization which bore them, nourished them, and cast them out.” This quote by Robert Emmet Jones, an associate professor specializing in sociology, parallels with A Streetcar Named Desire, in which the decline of the southern aristocracy left women, who were little more than decorative beauties, at the mercy of the real world. Knowing only their purpose of beauty, these women sacrificed their dignity for support, often facing and accepting abuse at the hands of men. One of the victims of this tragedy is Blanche Dubois, a delicate and fragile minded outcast. Ostracized by her hometown and abandoned by her family, she resorts to prostitution and alcoholism for consolation. In her efforts to assure herself of her own worth in her growing age, and to rescue her sister, Stella, from an abusive lifestyle, she offends the male-dominated society in which she is trapped. Despite Blanche’s controversial lifestyle and destructive actions, she is nonetheless a tragic heroine whose downfall resulted from poor treatment at the hands of a cruel society to which she refused to comply.…
Scott Westerfeld’s novel ‘Uglies’ focuses on looking at ones inner beauty by exaggerating the effects of purely focusing on external beauty. Pretties- the worlds most admired group of humans, with perfect skin, big eyes and full lips. Scott Westerfeld shown the exclusivity and conformity of being a Pretty by saying “You’re still yourself on the inside, Shay. But when you’re pretty, people pay more attention.” As Westerfeld explains, in New Pretty Town, parties and having fun are the top priority; having a job and working are a bit further down in the list. This priority is in exchange for how some in the real world get trapped in the ‘Beauty Cycle’ this means getting caught up in things like putting yourself first, only caring about who you are and not noticing the world and what’s happening around you. During the course of the novel Westerfeld exaggerates the effects of this change- from the world of ‘Uglies’ where people are considerate of the environment and people around them to the Barbie Doll Play House like land of the Pretties where the hardest decision is how you will get into the next big party.…
It was a typical spring day; flowers stand tall, soaking in the sun’s warm rays as they swing in the gentle yet crisp breeze. A song composed of chirping birds slightly overpower the sound of traffic as it is still early in the morning. Macy Jones awoke after a well rested night. Her facial expressions indicate happiness however, a way of reality hit, quickly transforming the slight smile into a deep frown. Macy Jones is not pretty, nor does she feel loved. She often wished her dull brown hair be traded for that of Abigail’s, the girl who modeled perfection. The one who captivated the attention of everyone in the room. The most popular amongst every high school in town. A sudden crash broke her train of thoughts. The long, full length mirror…
In Scott Westerfeld’s novel Uglies, a world ruled by beauty finds their world shaken when a group of young uglies challenge the status quo. All Tally Youngblood has ever wanted is to be pretty; unfortunately for her, when her friend Shay runs away, Tally is the only one who can find Shay. If Tally does not locate and betray her friend, she must face the ultimate consequence: to never be pretty. Westerfeld incorporates personal appearance into Uglies in an attempt to force the reader into acknowledging how an impossible concept of perfection as well as an obsession with “fitting in” rules today’s society.…
Wolf, Naomi. “The Beauty Myth.” The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty Are Used Against Women. New York: HaperCollins, 1991. Rpt. in Signs of Life in the USA: Readings on Popular Culture for Writers. 5th ed. Ed. Sonia Maasik and Jack Solomon. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2006. 486-494…
It is perhaps uplifting to have a teenage heroine who purges her precious hair because it gets in her way living in a world of teens obsessed with their self-image. Kristin Cashore’s unconventional and engrossing first novella, “Graceling,” has such a heroine. Katsa is hard-hitting, stubborn, beautiful, and consumed by unrelenting ethical concerns. She is particularly serious; one could say she lacks a sense of humor.…
Thus,Behn,in support of liberation of women,presents a play where women dare to break the stereotypes,risk loss of reputation and scathing contempt.Behn's female characters are feisty and strive for freedom within the mould of social norms regarding matrimony.…
This story shows how far some people go to achieve society’s standards of beauty. We also see how caught up people get in how the world wants them to look in the short play, Beauty, by Jane Martin.…
I believe both girls are caught up in the superficial aristocratic life portrayed in the play. But have a hidden depth to them that they try to bring forth but are prevented to do so by the strict code of conduct enforced upon them. On the surface they are shallow, young women concerned with appearances but beneath that they are people who want to have a happy life and to marry for…
“Beauty and the Beat” originally was written in 1740 by french writer Madame Gabrielle de Villeneuve known as “La belle et bete”(Hollywood). Within the story the the main character uses transformation to have beauty overcome evil. This theme tends to repeat itself throughout the story. Transformation is a thorough or dramatic change in form or appearance, referring to an individual who is able to change body parts between two forms, as well as alter the mental and emotional state. The main theme of the story would be transformation; however, it does take some time throughout the story to see where the transformation has taken place. Due to transformation occurring in many forms,it can be hard to recognize the exact moment…