Anakena Paddon
SOC 400
Beauty and Globalization
This
week’s were particularly compelling after the TEDx event on Saturday and
because they focus largely on the same themes I am exploring in my final paper
for this class: the issue of women’s bodies and the ideals of beauty we strive
for and whether or not there is a trend towards the homogenization and
globalization of these ideals.
In
“Yearning for Lightness” by Nakano Glenn, the article revolves mainly around colorism or the “social hierarchy based
on inheritance of gradations of skin tone within and between racial and ethnic
groups.” In many cases, the phenomenon of colorism is a negative inheritance of
European colonialism in many of these countries. The dangerous mercury soaps
used mostly in Southern Africa and manufactured around Europe for the purpose
of lightening the skin echo this same colonial past; the products now used in
the African-American community started as a heritage of slavery, when mulattos,
or mixed-race people, were ranked higher socially than “pure” Africans.
Interestingly,
the use of skin lighteners today is used most by young, urban, educated women
in the global South. This somewhat surprised me, because the education I am
receiving here inculcates a culture of empowerment, of confidence and of pride,
and the knowledge that who I am is enough. But I am also a white female living
in the global North, so my day-to-day struggles with other people’s defined
ideal aesthetics are not the same as a Nigerian undergraduate woman trying to
move up the social ladder. And indeed, Glenn points out that it is almost
automatic for people to judge others based off of skin tone. Skin color
operates as a “symbolic capital” which absolutely can affect and determine
one’s opportunities in life.
Young
African women today want to be two to three shades lighter, emulating the
ideals created by the likes of Halle Berry and Beyonce, both of whom have been
involved in various scandals of skin lightening. I took a class last semester
on “Visualizing Otherness” and we looked at the case of a photoshoot Beyonce
took for a French magazine called l’Officiel. In it, she is titled the African
Queen, and is in blackface. In class we discussed how African and African-American women are either
challenged to find the balance between appearing “white enough” and conforming
to Western ideals and upholding the post-colonial fantasy of the African Queen,
always regal, and poised.

Glenn
goes on to discuss the trends in India and the Philippines to focus more on
homemade concoctions until their markets were eventually opened up to and
consumed by the cosmetics markets of the world. The three biggest international
corporations which target specific audiences for skin lighteners are L’Oreal,
Shiseido, and Unilever. The fact that the demand for their products is
sky-rocketing emphasizes the “internalization” of “white is right”.
Unfortunately, this is a conversation I’ve heard multiple times while here, at
Conn. It did not necessarily revolve around skin but hair. Three friends of
mine, all African-American were commenting on a friend’s “bold” choice to “go
natural” and stop perming, straightening her hair, and instead let it grow out
in its “natural fro form”. Evidently, the discourse of empowerment and
confidence that I had been able to take away from this school had somewhat been
lost on them, because in a sea of predominantly white students, they still felt
the pressure to use expensive and extensive products on their hair, with only
the boldest of them accepting to show their natural hairstyles.
The
two chapters from “Miss India, Miss World” examined the role these women play
in the “embodiment of national identity.” Since I do not know much about these
beauty pageants, it was really interesting to me to hear about all the inner
workings of the training and the process as a whole. It is also somewhat
disgusting to see how internalized nationalistic and westernized ideals prevail
and govern the pageant. Simply the order of appearance of the contestants,
moving from Europe, to the Americas, to Asia and the South Pacific and finally
concluding with Africa highlights the ranking and preferences of the judges.
Another
point which I had not thought about was that all the women need to speak English
if they truly wish to make a connection with the audience and the judges. Working
with an interpreter and translator sets up a barrier and doesn’t allow for
their personalities to shine through, inhibiting their potential intelligent comments
to come out and instead focusing only on the beauty aspect of it.
I
thought the discourse comparing India and Venezuela was also very insightful. The
main point of this contrast was to demonstrate the level of accessibility of
the pageants in either country. For instance, in Venezuela, the whole country
focuses generally more on beauty, with a greater percentage of the population
fitting into a rising middle class. On the other hand, in India, the pageants
only really cater to the top 10% of the elite classes in India, making the rest
of the ceremony somewhat irrelevant to the other 90%. In chapter 5, the author
also presented how the provenance of the Miss candidates was important: the
difference between urban and rural candidates widens the audience gap because rural,
more conservative populations would be reluctant to allow women to parade
around in bikinis and they also have less access to beauty products in general.
Chapter
5 also focused on the ins and outs of the pageants and what goes into making a
beauty queen, from the dieting with Mukherjee, to the fitness with Mickey
Mehta, to the training facilities were women are taught to walk in heels,
answer interview questions and hold their bodies, the whole institution
continues to perpetuates Western ideals. One man who was a judge brought up the
issues of standardization of the pageantry business: how does one define
beauty? What is poise? What is stage presence?
Overall,
the general consensus was that participation in such an event, even if you do
not win, will bring you potential for upward mobility. To go back to the TEDx
talk – is this progress? Do the photographs of Milan-looking fashion catwalks
in Pakistan mean that the country is “progressing”? is that not just equating
progress with Westernization?
The Onishi article
of the Nigerian woman who won the Miss World title echoes this concern – if pageantry
has just become a way of asserting one country’s “betterness” over another,
then the women become pawns in a larger geo-political practice. If the women of
the country are no longer representing the overall beauty ideals of their
country, such as in the Nigerian case, then what’s the point?
It seems that the
idea of ranking women according to their beauty is one that has always been,
and continues to persist, from those middle school days when boys rank girls in
terms of their physical attractiveness all the way through to billion dollar
competitions where women are pitted against one another to compete for the
title of most beautiful, as defined by a handful of white males.
I really liked that you brought up hair. Throughout all the readings discussing skin lightening I kept thinking about the pain and suffering these women go through to achieve this unattainable goal of lighter skin, and how it seemed like these women were going to EXTREME lengths. I was also thinking, how is it that this culture condones this behavior?
ReplyDeleteBut from what I know about African American women's hair, the lengths they go to get their hard to fit within a White standard of beautiful hair are almost as extreme. And not only is it extreme, but our culture not only condones it, but expects it. So, we can't remove ourselves too much from the picture, even though we might think that we are educated in the issues, so they don't effect us.