The sudden axis in its stance towards cosmetic transparency praised as a welcome displacement of celebrity culture-which is questionable for rising demand for plastic surgery and our ever-increasing frustration with our appearance.
But as Laura Pitcher asks for DizzyCan the right to beauty be truly democrat?
“The level of plastic surgery transparency is a field to compete or produce even more pressure to adhere to today’s weak cosmetic standards?” Wonders.
“It is important to discuss the right people to have beauty worldwide in the context of white defender Western Beauty Standard.” To this end, the supposed democratization of the beauty industry is confused, because in reality beauty patterns are always defined by the elite. Thus, they then strengthen the white western aesthetic models – whether or not.
As cosmetic interventions go mainstream, admission, mud or function could be similar to “annual control”, says one plastic surgeon.
Young people have already developed loom terms for such contact: “Tweakments” and “Maintenance” 👇
– The economist (@theeconomist) January 3, 2025
“Nothing is inherently beautiful. We have to say what the beautiful and beauty of capitalism is in itself is a racial work, “says Laurie Essig, a professor of sex, sexuality and feminist studies at Middlebury College.
Kylie Jenner’s honesty about her processes can be a welcome breath of fresh air for some, but she sits strongly with others who have seen the billionaire prey – and win the insecurities of countless young women. Others see this sudden desire to be “proportionate” and “real” a form of “feminism of choice”.
“The feminism of the choice is successful because many women do not want to believe that they are in fact different or submit to a million ways, big and young – that the world is really like that.” wrote a user x After Jenner’s comment he became viral.
The term “Feminism Selection” was first created by Laura Hirshman in her 2006 book Get the job: a manifesto for women in the worldAnd it is a critical phrase for feminism expressions that emphasize women’s freedom of choice. These expressions seek to be non -critical and to reach as many allies as possible depoliticisation by its critics.
It is this desire to be widely accepted to cultivate a fear of politics – and so a paradoxical fear of feminism. But at the same time, do we have to demonize a young woman like Kylie Jenner to provide something she was asked for for so long?
We get back to a place where women cannot win. Where our actions are endlessly examined and criticized and removed – even more so when it comes to our appearance.
And so it is that the beauty industry will always win against the people who serve it – at least as long as we continue to prioritize it above all.
