Thursday, 29 January 2015

Research- How has the idea of beauty changed over time?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/05/perfect-body-change-beauty-ideals_n_4733378.html

-A woman with a "perfect body" in 1930 would barely get a second look from Hollywood producers or model casting agents today.
Addiction and eating disorder recovery site Rehabs.com worked with digital marketing agency Fractl on a project looking at the origins of Body Mass Index (BMI) measurements, and how the bodies of ideal women have compared to national averages over time. And their findings show that models and movie stars are getting smaller than the average American woman at unprecedented rates.
Though BMI measurements don't distinguish between fat and muscle, and are thus fairly inaccurate in determining whether someone is obese or not, BMI data from the past makes for interesting comparisons. According to the Center for Disease Control, the BMI of the average American women has steadily increased over the past half a century, from 24.9 in 1960 to 26.5 in the present day.
In a similar vein, Rehabs.com found that the difference between models' weights and the weight of the average American woman has grown from 8 percent in 1975 to over 23 percent today. The bottom line? There's more of a noticeable gap between the bodies of idealized women and everyday people.
Picking up on this disparity, brands like DoveDebenham's and H&M have made efforts to include diverse body types in their catalogs and ads. Organizations like The Representation Project are working to educate women and girls about media literacy and how to handle the sexualized images of women we see on television, billboards and the Internet. (Of course, we still have a very long way to go.)
In addition to the work of brands and organizations, looking back on the "ideal" women throughout the past century tells us just how arbitrary any vision of "the perfect body" is. Sex symbols have varied in terms of body shape, height, weight and tone, from the hourglass figure of Mae West to the waif-like Kate Moss. Though the diversity of these icons is limited -- they are all white, and none could be accurately described as plus-size -- it's gratifying to see that different body types have been construed as sexy, and likely will be again.
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-The "Gibson girl" was the creation of illustrator Charles Dana Gibson, a type of woman that came to epitomize the ideal feminine beauty at the turn of the century. Gibson described the figure, who was tall with a large bust and wide hips but a narrow waist, as a composite of young women he'd observed. In 1910, he told a reporter for the Sunday Times Magazine: "I'll tell you how I got what you have called the 'Gibson Girl.' I saw her on the streets, I saw her at the theatres, I saw her in the churches. I saw her everywhere and doing everything. I saw her idling on Fifth Avenue and at work behind the counters of the stores."
*The Gibson Girl, a creation of illustrator Charles Dana Gibson, was a synthesis of prevailing beauty ideals at the turn of the century. Rarely is a beauty standard so explicit and clearly defined, yet Gibson based the iconic illustrations on “thousands of American girls.” This ideal of femininity was depicted as slender and tall, albeit with a“voluptuous” bust and wide hips. The incongruous and exaggerated look was achieved by way of corseting, pinching the torso and waist significantly. Gibson Girls were portrayed as up-to-date on fashion and style, as well as physically active and in good health.

While the ideal originally began as the invention of an illustrator, the look was soon brought to life by various models and actresses such as Camille Clifford – winner of a contest to find a real-life analogue of Gibson's drawings – and Evelyn Nesbit. Following World War I, this idealized image gave way to that of the less prim and more informal flapper girl.


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-Flappers were known for their bobbed hair, shortened dresses and "scandalous" behavior such as smoking in public and driving cars. Flappers rarely wore corsets, downplaying their breasts and waists, and often showed their ankles or knees. 

In 1920, a lecturer named R. Murray-Leslie described flappers as "the social butterfly type… the frivolous, scantily-clad, jazzing flapper, irresponsible and undisciplined, to whom a dance, a new hat, or a man with a car, were of more importance than the fate of nations."

-Hollywood star Mae West could not have been more different from the flappers. She emphasized her waist and hips, flaunting her figure through close-fitting dresses. 

West allegedly once said: “Cultivate your curves -- they may be dangerous but they won't be avoided.”


1920s: The Flapper
A product of the increasingly liberal “Roaring Twenties,” the flapper represented an idea of women that was far more casual than the formal, corseted Gibson Girls. The archetypal flapper was an immature young woman – a teenager or young adult – who was scantily-clad and hadlittle regard for uptight behavioral norms.

They were often described as independent, wise-cracking and reckless. Their easygoing style represented a rejection of the Victorian style and also came to emblematize widespread disagreement with the Prohibition movement. Their appearance was one of boyishness and androgynous youth, with minimal breasts, a straight figure without any corseting, and shorter hair.
Flashing of the ankles, knees and legs was a common feature of flappers – dresses and skirts in the style were designed to be loose and reveal the legs when women would dance to jazz, popular among flappers. Bare arms were likewise nearly universal. Larger busts were frowned upon, and bras were made to tighten so as to flatten the chest. Blush, dark eye makeup, and substantial lips were in style, as well as tanning; a sporty and healthy appearance was prized.
The ideal of thinness and an enhanced appearance often drove women of the 1920s to diet and exercise in order to achieve this look, as well as buying cosmetics. The look to aspire to was increasingly depicted in advertisements. This freewheeling lifestyle came to an end with the onset of the Great Depression.
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-During World War II, the ideal moved away from the unattainable curves of Mae West and the carefree attitudes of the flapper. Stars like Rita Hayworth had flawless skin and healthy, slender bodies, a look not too far away from that of the average American woman.

-Sex symbols of the 1950s include Marilyn Monroe, Jayne Mansfield and Betty Page, known for their long legs and busty hourglass figures. Pin-up girls like Sophia Loren and Brigitte Bardot exuded glamour. 

"The body is meant to be seen, not all covered up," Monroe once said.

-Along with the sexual revolution, the 1960s brought with it a new beauty ideal -- slender and long-legged. High-fashion model Twiggy Lawson became famous for her small frame and "androgynous" look -- a nod to the flapper ideal. 

Twiggy has spoken out against the thinness ideal while recognizing her own role in perpetuating it. 

"I was a very, very skinny model in the 60s, but naturally... that's what I looked like," She told The Huffington Post in 2010. "I ate. I always said I ate, and I looked like my dad who was very skinny, so I think that's genetic... if you are 17 years old and you are 5-foot-11, the chances are you're going to be thin."

-Along with the sexual revolution, the 1960s brought with it a new beauty ideal -- slender and long-legged. High-fashion model Twiggy Lawson became famous for her small frame and "androgynous" look -- a nod to the flapper ideal. 

Twiggy has spoken out against the thinness ideal while recognizing her own role in perpetuating it. 

"I was a very, very skinny model in the 60s, but naturally... that's what I looked like," She told The Huffington Post in 2010. "I ate. I always said I ate, and I looked like my dad who was very skinny, so I think that's genetic... if you are 17 years old and you are 5-foot-11, the chances are you're going to be thin."

-As an athletic body type became more popular, "hardbodies" -- incredibly toned, slim women -- were considered incredibly attractive. Being thin was ideal; being thin and strong was even better. According to Rehabs.com, 60 percent of 1980s Playboy models weighed 15 percent less than the healthy average weight for their size. 

Actress Jane Fonda was the face of the fitness craze and the epitome of the "hardbody" -- her aerobic exercise videos sold millions of copies. 

The 80s also saw the introduction of supermodels like Naomi Campbell and Claudia Schiffer, whose tall, thin bodies were far from the average American woman's body type.

-In the 1990s, models got drastically thinner. Kate Moss' waif-like appearance in her 1993 Calvin Klein campaigns coined the term "heroin chic" -- pale skin, angular bone structure and extremely thin limbs were in fashion. 

Moss has famously said, "Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels."

-The 2000s brought us the reign of the Victoria's Secret Angel -- tall, thin and leggy models with big breasts, flowing hair and toned bodies. Brazilian model Adriana Lima has been a VS Angel since 2000.

-http://www.rehabs.com/explore/womens-body-image-and-bmi/
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"This has resulted in a severe rise in weight anxieties and negative body image among women and girls"

"Dissatisfaction with weight is nearly universal among women, while dieting is pervasive. Girls as young as 6 are commonly unhappy with their weight. This trend has likewise been reflected around the world wherever this media culture has become dominant. The result has been the massive spread of previously rare eating disorders and lifelong unhappiness toward one's own body."

***************************************************************1930s-1940s: Fashion in Wartime
The impact of the Great Depression brought a more traditional style back to women's fashion and body image. Though short hair remained commonplace, skirts once again became longer, and clothing that showed off a natural waist was in style.

Shoulder width was particularly emphasized, and the prevailing shape at the time became starker, highlighting the specific contours of the body rather than draping and disguising them in softness.
With America's involvement in World War II came wartime requisitioning of fashion materials such as silk, nylon, and clothing dye. Women's attire therefore trended toward practicality, with simple blouses and un-elaborate jackets becoming predominant. Women even received instructions on how to tailor the unused suits of men away in combat, remaking them into everyday women's wear. And in contrast to the lean boyish flapper style, women now aspired to become more curvaceous and emphasize their feminine figure. In particular, advertisements now told women how they could avoid a too-skinny look.


In this era, the celebrity image was almost within reach of the average woman. While American women had an average BMI of 23.6, many celebs ranged from 18.5 (Barbara Stanwyck) to to 20.3 (Lena Horne) – a gap, to be sure, but not an extraordinary one.
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1950s: Post-War
The ideal body image for women remained fuller-figured in the post-war period of the 1950s. A busty, voluptuous hourglass look was prized, as exhibited by models such as Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelly.
The increasing popularity of Hollywood films helped propel glamour models like Monroe to widespread public consciousness, and combined with the increased freedom of material after the end of wartime rationing, women's fashion options were once again extensive. However, this expansion in options now meant that women were expected to take full advantage of beauty products and never leave the home without looking their best. Along with a well-composed overall appearance, flawless skin was now expected as well.
During this period, the average woman’s BMI remained steady at 23.6, still well above that of Shirley MacLaine (18.8) or Elizabeth Taylor (20.5).
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1960s: Twiggy
With the sexual revolution of the 1960s came a substantial reversal of the '50s idealized image. Rather than curvaceous figures, thin and androgynous women were now prominent, somewhat recapitulating the flapper look of the 1920s.
Twiggy, a major supermodel of the 1960s, embodied many of these seismic shifts in idealized body types. In contrast to the full-figured and voluptuous Monroe and Kelly, the 112 lb Twiggy had a minimal chest, a slight frame, short hair, and a boyish look. This new form of beauty abandoned all curves and any hint of a mature look, instead appearing almost prepubescent.
However, a “hippie” look including long, straight hair also came to the fore in the latter half of the '60s, and a more full-figured hourglass look persisted among several high-profile actresses such as Jane Fonda and Sophia Loren.
This decade, the average American woman’s BMI rose to 25.2 – taking her quite a distance from celebrities like Soledad Miranda (17.6) and Jessica Lange (20.4).
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1970s: Thin Is In
The 1970s saw the continued dominance of a Twiggy-like thin ideal, which began to have awidespread impact on women's health and eating habits. Anorexia nervosa first began to receive mainstream coverage in the '70s, and singer Karen Carpenter was known to diet at starvation levels over the decade – a practice which would claim her life in 1983. The era also saw the rise of diet pills, which often used potentially dangerous amphetamines to suppress the appetite.
Actress Farrah Fawcett and her layered hair and one-piece swimsuits also rose to prominence as a sex symbol of the time. Hair was typically worn long, and makeup was now minimal to achieve a “natural look.” The cosmetics industry diversified to take advantage of these trends, with a wider range of offerings in terms of makeup looks.
American women’s BMI remained relatively steady at 24.9, making it difficult to match the body types of celebrities like Morgan Fairchild (18) or Joni Mitchell (20.5).
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1980s: Supermodels and Hardbodies
While the 1970s thin ideal persisted, there was now also an increased emphasis on fitness. Toned but not overly muscular bodies were now prized, and aerobic exercise shows and videotapes became a widespread trend – dieting was no longer the only way that women were expected to keep a perfect figure.
Media depictions of women in the '80s tended toward even more slenderness and greater height. The most popular fashions included headbands, tights, leggings, leg warmers, and short skirts made of spandex or other stretchy materials. This era also saw the rise of supermodels such as Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, and Claudia Schiffer. In the '80s, 60% of Playboy magazine models weighed 15% less than a healthy average weight for their size.
For the average American woman, such a body shape proved difficult or impossible to achieve. While women had an average BMI of 25 in 1980, most female celebrities ranged from 17.6 (Cheryl Tiegs) to 20.4 (Bo Derek).
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1990s: Heroin Chic and Baywatch
Throughout the '90s, this ideal became even more exaggerated. Women were expected to maintain an increasingly thin look, yet with large breasts as well, as popularly depicted by Pamela Anderson on “Baywatch.”
Meanwhile, high fashion also began to emphasize the “waif look” and “heroin chic.” This movement stood opposed to the fit and healthy look of '80s supermodels, instead focusing on thinness alone and a bony appearance. The look was epitomized by Calvin Klein advertisements featuring models such as Kate Moss.
Throughout the decade, American women continued to face an impossible standard. Celebrities like Tara Reid (17.5) and Penelope Cruz (19.6) showed off bodies that were far below the average of 26.3. By the year 2000, the situation was more dire than ever: Women with an average BMI of 27.5 were left to compare their bodies to Keira Knightley (17.2) and Natalie Portman (19.5).
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The Shrinking Woman: Bodies in Media
The weight and proportion of popular female icons, as measured by BMI, has remained consistently below that of the average American woman for several decades. In the 1950s, Marilyn Monroe had a BMI of 20; Twiggy, the '60s supermodel, had a BMI of merely 15. '80s model Cindy Crawford had a BMI of 19, while Kate Moss's BMI was only 16.
For comparison, the average American woman had a BMI of 25.2 in the '60s, 24.9 in the '70s, 25 in the '80s, and 26.3 in the '90s. As the size of the average woman continued to increase, growing to 27.5 in the 2000s, models and actresses maintained what is by comparison a super-thin look.
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Who Defines “Plus Size”? Bodies in Business
Twenty years ago, models weighed, on average, 8% less than average American women. By now,they weigh 23% lessMost models now have a weight that’s considered clinically anorexic.
Even the definition of “plus size” has begun to shrink. Ten years ago, plus size models typically ranged between size 12 and 18, while they now span only sizes 6 through 14. Half of American women actually wear a size 14 or larger, meaning that even plus sizes no longer represent the average American woman. Most designer fashions now only range up to size 10 or 12.
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Overall Trends
The American body ideal for women has fluctuated somewhat throughout the 20th century, with alternately stick-thin or voluptuous, busty figures being valued at times. But in recent decades, these two conflicting images appear to have merged into a modern synthesis of what is considered beautiful: an almost unhealthily thin and bony frame, combined with a substantial bust.

Meanwhile, the gap between the size and shape of models and that of the average American woman has only continued to widen. As the average BMI of women has increased, models have remained significantly below this average, often with BMIs of a mere 15 or 16 – considered clinically underweight. The BMIs of celebrity women are only slightly better, most commonly ranging from 17 to 20. The result is that, for a growing number of American women, the image of beauty portrayed in media is simply impossible for them to achieve and potentially unhealthy even if they did achieve it.
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20TH CENTURY BEAUTY IDEALS AROUND THE WORLD

As evidenced by the fluctuations of popular images of women in America throughout the 20th century, beauty ideals are not a permanent and unchanging set of expectations. They are relative to their culture and era, and they shift over time. Just as these body images have changed in America, the ideal of beauty for women can be similar or sometimes much different in other parts of the world.
Western Nations
English-speaking, European, and first-world Western nations often broadly share in the same conflicting messages of beauty found in America. Britain has a similar struggle with popular messages promoting unattainable thinness, leading to weight issues and widespread dieting among women – 1 in 4 are on a diet, and over 50% of girls say that girls their age struggle with body image. In Australia, eating disorders affect a million people and cost the economy $70 billion a year.
In France, long the global capital of the fashion industry, lawmakers have passed legislation barring advertisements promoting “extreme” thinness or dieting, following the anorexia-linked deaths of several models. In Italy, women are extensively objectified in media, and many young women are driven to obtain plastic surgery as soon as they reach the legal age to do so. And in Sweden, an increasing number of upper-class young women are obsessed with their appearance and dissatisfied with their bodies – this group has the highest incidence of anorexia nervosa.
In Spain and Mexico, 1 in 4 teen girls are at risk of developing an eating disorder, and they face pressure from those around them to lose weight. Brazilians are known to overestimate the actual size of their bodies, while desiring to be thinner. A substantial portion of the Brazilian population takes appetite suppressants, and numerous models have died of anorexia.
Eastern and Third-World Nations
Eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia were almost wholly absent in Japan and China in the early '90s. However, Chinese women do exhibit a significant fear of weight gain. Japanese women, too, are becoming far skinner in recent years and are very critical of each other's appearance. Twenty-nine percent of Japanese women are now underweight.
Elsewhere, Nigeria now has businesses dedicated to helping people put on weight, offering a place where they can do nothing but eat and sleep. In Mauritania, young girls are encouraged to eat to gain weight in order to be more attractive to potential partners. And in the island nation of Tonga, 90% of the population is overweight, which is considered a status symbol. In Cape Town, South Africa, two-thirds of teen girls perceive excess weight as a sign of happiness and wealth.
In Karachi, Pakistan, high media exposure has been found to be linked to female body dissatisfaction. Saudi Arabian women both overestimate and underestimate their weight at about the same rates. In India, internalization of media by young women and girls is linked to an increased drive to be thin. Potentially dangerous skin-lightening creams have also become a popular way for Indians to approach a whiter body image.

WHAT MOLDS SELF-IMAGE AND BODY CONFIDENCE?

A number of factors contribute to women's poor self-image and body dissatisfaction. In a longitudinal study of teenagers, the strongest predictors of negative body image were found to be a lack of parental support, negative mood and feelings, and the choice to diet, as well as a lack of support from peers. Girls show higher rates of negative body image than boys, and unlike boys, the intensity of this increases as they age.
Another study showed that after women were shown media images depicting the modern thin ideal, they had an increase in anxiety, depression, anger, and dissatisfaction with their bodies. Use of such media has also been found to be associated with symptoms of disordered eating and an urge to be thin. As women's family, friends, and peers also absorb these media messages, this adds to an increased pressure to aspire to this ideal coming from all directions.
Moreover, as women pursue this thin ideal, they are more likely to become more dissatisfied with their appearance. Most will not be able to attain this ideal and will remain unhappy with their bodies. Perfectionist women, anxious or depressed women, and women with poor self-esteem are especially at risk for developing an eating disorder. At this point, anxiety over body image and ongoing dieting have become frequent enough to be considered a normal if unhealthy state of affairs among women.
In contrast, positive relationships and acceptance from friends are associated with a healthy self-image. As the belief in thinness being important to relationships with friends decreased, positive self-image increased. Thus, when this thin ideal is deemphasized in one's peer group, a positive self-image can more easily be cultivated.

CONTAGIOUS EATING DISORDERS: THE HEALTH CONSEQUENCES OF MEDIA EXPOSURE

Aspirations for thinness can begin to impact girls at a surprisingly young age. In one study, 40% of 6-year-old girls expressed a desire to be thinner. An overwhelming majority of 10-year-old girls – 81% – fear being fat. Half of girls in 5th grade through 12th grade feel that magazine images have made them want to lose weight.
Among girls who are of normal weight, 50-70% perceive themselves as being overweight. These self-perceptions can directly affect their eating behaviors and health. Of girls age 6 to 12, 35% have been on a diet at some point. Ten- and 11-year-old girls who had dieted were shown to have internalized media messages to a greater extent than those who did not diet.
Globally, rates of eating disorders in young girls such as anorexia and bulimia are steadily increasing. This has occurred in England, Brazil, Australia, Singapore, and a number of other nations. Fiji is an ideal setting to study the impact of media. Television was not introduced in the remote provinces of Fiji until the mid-1990s. Over the next three years, teenage girls went from viewing being overweight positively to viewing it negatively, and 74% thought of themselves as too fat. Many decided to diet.

FIGHTING BACK: EFFORTS TO COUNTER MEDIA-INDUCED INSECURITY

In response to widespread negative self-image and unhealthy eating habits among women and girls, a number of business, media, and government entities have launched campaigns to promote positive self-perceptions of weight and appearance. A Brazilian modeling agency advised women to “say no to anorexia,” with billboards showing altered images of emaciated figures to reflect what a woman would look like if she attained an idealized shape and weight.
French model Isabelle Caro appeared in Italian ads showing her emaciated body and the consequences of anorexia. The Looking Glass Foundation has also run a series of ads to teach people about the subtle warning signs that someone may be suffering from an eating disorder. And in 2007, the Council of Fashion Designers of America launched a health initiative aimed at helping at-risk models receive assistance and treatment.
Beauty and cosmetic company Dove embarked on their Campaign for Real Beauty in 2004, with a series of viral advertisements portraying the differences between women as depicted in ads and women's actual appearance without any makeup or digital enhancement. Their print ads have also shown women of various weights, shapes and sizes, without alteration.
New York City has promoted positive body image in girls aged 7-12 with a series of PSAs depicting everyday girls, captioned “I'm Beautiful The Way I Am.” And National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, orchestrated by the National Eating Disorder Association, has been successful in urging more people to seek help for their eating disorders.

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

By the end of the 20th century, female beauty standards in America have remained unrealistic and extreme, with popular images of thinness being more out-of-reach for the average woman than ever before. This trend has been reflected in many first-world nations, although women in certain developing nations lack this widespread anxiety over their weight.
The chief contributors to negative self-image and weight dissatisfaction are media images promoting thinness, peer pressure, and personal levels of anxiety or depression – conditions which can be exacerbated by continued unsuccessful pursuit of an unattainable goal. The result has been a marked rise in weight anxieties in even very young girls, as well as an increase in dieting from a young age, and even potentially deadly eating disorders such as anorexia. While the severity of this problem is receiving increasing attention in the public sphere, these anxieties remain so common as to be “normal” among women.

how has the idea of beauty changed over time?
"In other representations of women at this time, the hair can sometimes tend to obscure their facial features, since it frames the face in a curtain-like mass of braids and plaits, the hair being another attribute of beauty associated with Hathor, goddess of beauty, who was also hailed as 'She of the Beautiful Hair' and 'Lady of the Lock'."
http://news.discovery.com/history/art-history/history-beauty-120412.htm

*Venus and Adonis by Peter Paul Rubens, 1635

Today, "Rubenesque" is a polite way to say "big" or "plus-sized." Peter Paul Rubens painted portraits of full-figured women in the early 1600s, inspired by his second wife, 16-year-old Hélène Fourment.

*Gibson Girl, 1897
"In the late 19th century, the emphasis was really on women’s facial features," said Joan Jacobs Brumberg, a historian who wrote "The Body Project: An Intimate History of American Girls."
"The bosom was noticed in the 19th century but not with too much cleavage." Women wore corsets, and the Gibson Girls showed off slender waists. Ankles, also, were highly sexualized.

*Flapper Girls, 1929
Around World War I, with the advent of movies, the body begins to be emphasized as much, or more, than the face.
"Fashion has changed so that a slim silhouette in a chemise is ideal, and matronly seems old fashioned. Women are dancing and doing sports, and they are no longer infatuated with the Victorian ideal of being frail and sickly,” Brumberg said.
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*Marilyn Monroe, 1955
After WWII, technology started changing the way beauty was perceived: bathrooms with electric lights and mirrors highlighted concerns about acne and formerly overlooked details, Brumberg said. Corsets replace girdles, and bra cups became extremely pointed.
Actress Marilyn Monroe was perceived as the epitome of beauty in the 50s. There's been much speculation about her size and weight. Was she really a plus-sized beauty, asks this piece in Jezebel which dug up the actress's actual dress size numbers.
Photo: Actress Marilyn Monroe on the set of "The Seven Year Itch," directed by Billy Wilder in 1955.

*Betty Page, 1955
In 1955, Betty Page won the title "Miss Pinup Girl of the World."
She was known as "The Queen of Curves" and "The Dark Angel."
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*Twiggy, 1966
“It wasn’t just feminists who burned bras,” Brumberg said. “Bras and underwear changed. The body becomes something for you to control from the inside, through diet and exercise, instead of exterior control through the corset. Different body parts get attention in different ways.”
Model and actress Twiggy personified the swinging 60s mod culture in London. Twiggy was known for her androgynous looks, large eyes and short hair. In 1966, she was named "The Face of 1966" by the Daily Express and voted British Woman of the Year.

*Christie Brinkley, 1987
When Allure magazine conducted a poll on beauty in 1990, Christie Brinkley embodied the all-American look, landing her on the cover of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit edition three times.
When Allure did a similar survey in 2010, attitudes had changed: 69 percent of respondents no longer believed in a single "all-American" look. Women and men picked a Latina model as most attractive among pictures of different races and ethnicities.
Photo: Christie Brinkley Sighting in London - July 12, 1987

*Michelle Obama, 2012
"Michelle Obama is very much about health and mobility and activity and strength,” Brumberg said. “People may say she looks hot, but really they’re saying she’s an icon for the women’s health movement.”
Obama’s body suggests healthy eating, she notes, whereas today's fashion magazines still portray more emaciated bodies.
*Ashley Judd, 2012
Ashley Judd's piece in the Daily Beast asks everyone to try to change the conversation about beauty.
"If this conversation about me is going to be had, I will do my part to insist that it is a feminist one, because it has been misogynistic from the start. "
"Why was a puffy face cause for such a conversation in the first place? How, and why, did people participate? If not in the conversation about me, in parallel ones about women in your sphere? What is the gloating about? What is the condemnation about? What is the self-righteous alleged 'all knowing' stance of the media about? How does this symbolize constraints on girls and women, and encroach on our right to be simply as we are, at any given moment?”
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*Pale for the win
If you could afford to not be outside working in the fields and getting a great farmers tan, you stayed inside. Making sure to stay pale. And if you couldn’t do it naturally, you faked the pale skin with poisonous titanium paint.
It’s also where the term “blue blood” comes from to describe the wealthy elite. People wanted to be so pale, you could see the blue blood veins on their face.

*Showering was out, perfume in
Whether you were sweating out in the fields or holed up at home, with rare exceptions, showering would not have been on your to do list. Except in cultures like ancient Rome or India where baths were social arenas and expected, bathing was a seasonal activity.

*Curvy was always cool
The weightier you were the better. In times when food was scarce and hard to get, being full figured meant you had, had enough to eat and were a potentially healthy and rich person.
The past century’s emphasis on mass consumption meant that the wealthy needed to stop eating in order to stand out from the rising middle class. Skinnier suddenly became fashionable and has stuck around since as the concerning model of femininity we currently aspire to.

*Bring on he wigs
Long hair had long been a status symbol in pre-hygienic societies because of its difficulties to maintain under limited bathing conditions. Its signified time and energy that only the elite often had.
When venereal diseases started making the royal courts of Europe bald in the 17th century, they were unwilling to give up the pretense of their locks and started wearing wigs.
The bigger the wig, the larger the cost, so the ostentation of the wigs quickly got out of hand.

*The ginge was in
Red hair on ladies has been one of the most preferred colors throughout history. Being natural or entirely faked.
Its rarity made it special. And the ability to dye one’s hair with henna or other natural agents to produce a red color made it and elite practice in pre-Industrial societies.
Ginger boys, on the other hand, got the fuzzy end of the redhead lollipop.
By the Elizabethean era, red hair on men meant they had fiery tempers and a beastly sexual nature.

*The modern rise of make-up
The modern era really likes makeup and for that you have to thank technology.
In order to get the female’s fatales and ingenues of the early silent screen to not look washed out under the light and cameras, they started exaggerating their eyes and lips with makeup. The rest of America followed suit. Hollywood makeup guru Max factors turned his work on the set into a massive industry and its still the best mascara on the market.

*The Joy of Plucky faces
Early films also set American audiences on a new eyebrow pathway. Before, eyebrows had usually been left to the force of nature. But the straight thin eyebrows of ‘It’ girl, Clara Bow launch brows into the fashion mainstream of the 20th century as flapper chic.
It wouldn’t last long though. During the 1950s, thick brows were back in vogue. Now were at a stage in history where almost any eyebrow goes.

*To shave or not to shave
 Though there’s plenty of evidence that ancient cultures shaved their bodies on occasions, most of that relates to men athletes.
Modern society’s current infatuations with shaving their legs, arms and armpits is an entirely 20th century fetish that seems to stem slightly from the changing hemlines and senses of propriety about what women could and couldn’t wear. But even more so from the capitalist attitude of men’s shaving blade companies. They wanted more customers and so began advertising to women about benefits of shaving until it became an almost ingrained necessity to have smooth legs and became an almost ingrained necessity to have smooth legs and armpits.

*The popularity of the hair down there
The recent movement to full-scale hair removal below the neckline is an entirely modern phenomenon that may have its roots in the popularity and availability of pornography.
The increased visibility of lady parts on screen led to changing fads in landscaping everything down below.

*Manscaping is back
Manscaping has a long and ancient history. Egyptians priests used to ritually shave their whole bodies every three days. Greeks and roman athletes also liked to stay all nice and sleek.
But like with women’s makeup, outside these Mediterranena enclaves male body hair was a symbol of virility and manliness, so the more the better for most of the rest of history. Until now. Manscaping has returned from a vengeance and isn’t just for priests and sportsman anymore.
There possible up to 63 percent of American males between 18 and 50 have been waxed at some point this year. Men do use salon to look beautiful and better not just for others but to feel better about them.

*Plastic surgery goes wild
Plastic surgery started out as a 20th century fix for people born with birth defects or who had had unfortunate accidents.
Quietly, movie stars and the wealthy began patronizing plastic surgeons for superficial reasons.
For decades it was entirely scandalous to have had some work done.
That stigma seems to have entirely dissipated. Reality television seems to have played a huge part in that. The ease with witch the wealthy faux celebrities of certain shows undertook breast augmentations, nose jobs, and Botox has encouraged their middle and lower class audiences to follow.
*Tiny waists preferred
Before the medical advancements that made plastic possible, the closest popular augmentation undertaken for beautification centered around a lady’s waist.
Tiny was better, even if that men constant binding and rib breaking in order to get your mid-section down to size.
Though the whalebone corsets of the Victorian period have fallen out of favor, small waists are still fashionable in certain fetish and burlesque settings.


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