1 / 74

Historical and Contemporary Ideals of Beauty

Explore the evolution of beauty standards throughout history, from Ancient Greece to modern times, including body modification practices. Discover how cultural and societal influences shape perceptions of beauty.

hubbs
Download Presentation

Historical and Contemporary Ideals of Beauty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ideals of Beauty and Body Modification Martin T Donohoe, MD, FACP

  2. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Ancient Greeks valued symmetry • Contemporary definitions similar: • “Ideal woman”: small chin, delicate jaws, full lips, small nose, high cheek bones, large and widely spaced eyes, and waist:hip ratio of 0.7 • “Ideal man”: taller, waist:hip ratio of 0.9, dominant/rectangular face/chin, deep-set eyes, heavy brow • Suggests strong supply of testosterone

  3. “Ugly” • Common first name in Ancient Greece, parts of sub-Saharan Africa • Idea: give children bad names so demons won’t find them • Other favorites: “Disagreeable,” “Crippled”

  4. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Scarification – dates back at least 4,000 years • Chinese foot binding • pain, osteoporosis, falls/imbalance • Surgery to reshape women’s feet for stiletto heels increasingly popular • Ancient Greek newborn female baby wrapping

  5. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Ancient Roman women colored their lips with red cinnabar stone, a type of mercury ore, lined their faces with white lead, and rouged their cheeks with red lead • Ancient Egyptians/Roman/Persians: antimony for conjunctival sparkle • Rome to medieval Europe: paleness preferred

  6. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Renaissance women used leeches on their ears to drain blood from their faces for a fashionably pale complexion • Elizabethan hair plucking, ceruse makeup • Elizabethans used lard to set wigs, which could result in rat infestations

  7. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Court of Louis XVI: blue veins drawn on neck and shoulders to emphasize noble blood • 16th & 17th century: belladona eye drops

  8. Historical Ideals of Beauty • 18th Century: vermillion makeup (sulfur and mercury) • 14th - 19th century: corsetting (whalebone and steel) – precursor to the girdle/Spanx • Making a comeback at both high- and low-end retailers (takes up to 30 minutes to lace up; requires an extra set of hands)

  9. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Unibrow: • Sign of criminal tendencies in Victorian England; mark of beauty in contemporary Iran • 19th Century: Vacuum pumps and vibration therapy for baldness/”flabby skin”; mercury-based freckle remover

  10. Historical Ideals of Beauty • Efik people of the Nigerian coast, others: fattening rituals • Breast implants (since 1903 - Charles Miller, MD) • First silicone breast enlargement 1962

  11. Contemporary Ideals of Beauty • “Better Baby Contests” – Eugenic Movement / Social Darwinism • Today – “Baby Bangs” • Tapeworms (Maria Callas) • Rib removal (Cher?) • Prostitutes using diuretics (for weight loss), child sex workers forced to take dexamethasone (to look older, “curvier”)

  12. Contemporary Ideals of Beauty • Botox injections • Plastic surgery • Abusive subjugation of women through body modification – female genital mutilation • Cultural components

  13. Ideals of Beauty • Brass neck rings (Paduang people of Burma) • Lip and earlobe expanders (certain African tribes) • Tattoos, body piercings, wings

  14. Ideals ofBeauty • Wonderbra, Brava Bra ($2500, suction device worn overnight for 10 weeks, promises 1 cup increase (actual increase ½ cup size), can cause broken blood vessels, skin rash, discomfort) • Wonderbum pantyhose (DuPont Lycra) – promises a “perfectly peachy, pert bottom” • Music industry depictions of beauty

  15. Ideals of Beauty • Ancient Greeks – symmetry • Remains true • Familiarity, personality traits also important • Evolutionary adaptation for survival of human species • Size, muscle power, pathogen-free status, fertility

  16. The Perks of Beauty • The good-looking are more likely to have higher self-esteem, date more, get higher grades, graduate from college, get married, be hired, get paid more (including tips), and be promoted sooner • Lifetime earnings difference between the typical “good-looking” and “below average-looking” worker = $230,000

  17. The Perks of Beauty • Height is associated with income and leadership positions • Ironically, 50 years ago some women were treated with estrogen to prevent them from growing too tall and becoming un-marriable • This impaired their fertility, among other consequences • Strangers are more likely to assist good-looking people in distress

  18. The Perks of Beauty • The pretty/handsome are less likely to be reported, caught, accused, or punished for a minor or major crime • Role of ageism (more important for women) • The responsibility: • Attractiveness is recognized as a special gift, and its misuse is not tolerated

  19. The Adonis Complex • 38% of men want bigger pectorals; 34% of women want bigger breasts • Each year, men spend over $2 billion on health club memberships and $2 billion for home exercise equipment • Tommy John surgery • To enhance elbow strength and improve pitching velocity

  20. Anabolic Steroid Abuse • Supplement industry booming • 3 million American men have swallowed or injected anabolic steroids since they became widely available in the 1960s

  21. Anabolic Steroid Abuse • 2.5-6.0% of current middle and high school students have used anabolic steroids (100% increase over last 6 years); rates higher among boys • Use associated with violent behavior • 35% use protein powders/shakes to build muscle

  22. Adonis Complex of the Middle Aged and Elderly • “Low T (testosterone) Syndrome” • Hypogonadism is a real disorder, but “Low T Syndrome” manufactured by drug companies to treat those with stunted libidos and depressed mood • “Treatment” carries increased risk of cardiovascular disease, BPH, prostate cancer

  23. Cosmetics • Concocted at home prior to 20th Century • Industry spawned by: • “Allure” of prostitutes/sexuality • Mass popularity of anti-aging products in 1920s • Women entering workforce • Migrations to cities • Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (1938)

  24. Cosmetics • Worldwide annual spending around $19 billion ($8 billion in US) • 33% more than the amount needed each year (in addition to current expenditures) to provide water and sanitation for all people in developing nations • Slightly more than the amount needed each year (in addition to current expenditures) to provide reproductive healthcare for all women in developing countries

  25. Cosmetics • Average American adult uses 9 personal care products/day (with 126 unique chemical ingredients) • 89% of the over 10,500 ingredients used in personal care products never tested for toxicity • Little FDA oversight

  26. Cosmetics • Most contain carcinogens and/or endocrine disruptors (see http://www.cosmeticsdatabase.com/) • Unusual/dangerous ingredients include: • Mercury – skin creams • Lead – lipstick and kohl (decorative black eyeliner, alleged to help children’s eyes develop and protect them against curses) • Arsenic, Cadmium, Copper, aluminum • Bacteria – mascara

  27. Cosmetics • Unusual/dangerous ingredients include: • Mica (lung-damaging particles) • Cow colostrum • Gold • Foreskin • Placenta/Fetal cells • Paint stripper and varnish - eyeliner

  28. Cosmetics and Hair Coloring • Women devote average of 19 minutes per day to treating and altering their faces • 55% of American women between 13 and 70 color their hair • 1/8 American men between 16 and 60

  29. Hair Care Products • African-American “hair relaxers” contain endocrine disruptors • Use increases risk of uterine fibroids, cancers • Brazilian Blowout hair straightening products contain formaldehyde (possible carcinogen)

  30. Scented Products • Many cosmetics, perfumes, colognes, air freshener sprays, candles, oils, and gels contain fragrances • Some fragrances toxic • Many contain allergens • 30% of Americans report skin irritation or headaches with at least some scented products

  31. Cosmetics • 2013: EU bans sale of all cosmetics tested on animals

  32. Tanning • The skin’s response to ultraviolet light injury • No such thing as a “safe tan” • 95% of Americans understand that sunburns are dangerous, but 81% still think they look better with a tan.

  33. Tanning • UVA and UVB dangerous • Ozone damage allows greater UV radiation exposure • Estimated lifetime risk of melanoma 1/70 • Clouds filter out only 20% of sun’s UV rays • Snow reflects up to 80% of UV rays (sand 17%) • White T-shirt has SPF 7 (min 15 recommended); darker shirts have higher SPFs

  34. Artificial Tanning • 36% of adults, 25% of teens, and 55% of college students use a tanning lamp each year (females more than males) • More than 90% of users are aware that premature aging and skin cancer are possible complications of tanning lamp use (melanoma and basal cell)

  35. Artificial Tanning • WHO: tanning beds cause cancer • 419,000 cases of basal and squamous cell skin cancer and 11,000 cases of melanoma each year attributable to indoor tanning • Melanoma rate up 200% 1973-2014

  36. Skin Cancers – Other Estimates • Skin cancers of all types rising: 1/5 Americans will get during their lifetimes • Increased lifetime melanoma risk • 1/1500 - 1930 • 1/68 – today • Due mostly to ozone destruction, which is reversing due to Montreal Protocol (phaseout of CFCs)

  37. Tanning Facilities • Over 50,000 in US (more than the number of Starbucks or McDonalds) • Generate revenues of over $5 billion/yr

  38. Tanning Facilities • Most countries do not limit access of youths to tanning parlors • Most US states limit access of youths (bans; parental consent) • FDA regulates as moderate risk devices, requires black box warning for minors (but does not outlaw or restrict use by minors) • Indoor 10% tanning tax implemented in 2010 as part of PPACA (Obama Health Care Plan)

  39. Tanning • Tanning as a substance abuse-like disorder • Associated with other addictions • Excessive indoor tanning associated with depression, suicide attempts • Tanning produces endorphins • some contain fragrances – can cause allergic reactions • Sprays may damage lungs

  40. Tanning • Mineral sunscreens best (Zn or Titanium); lotions and creams do not necessarily protect against UVA) • Use SPF of at least 15 and re-apply frequently • Avoid benzophenone (aka oxybenzone, estrogenic); avobenzone is safer

  41. Artificial Tanning • Many lotions, creams, and sprays available • Most contain dihydroxyacetone (DHA) – can damage DNA and lungs and cause allergic reactions • Burgeoning industry • “Natural” does not necessarily mean safe • See EWG database

  42. Artificial Tanning • Increased (but not excessive) carotenoid-containing fruit and vegetable consumption can improve skin color • Tanning pills (not approved for use) containing canthaxanthin dangerous • Skin lightening creams may contain mercury

  43. Tattooing • Roman Empire used to brand convicts, slaves, and army deserters • Tattoo from Tahitian word “tatau” (“to mark”) • Reached apogee among Maori • Popularized in West by sailors returning from Polynesia

  44. Tattooing • Aesthetic choice • Initiation rite • Time-saving way for disabled to overcome difficulties of applying makeup • Adjuvant to reconstructive surgery (particularly face and breast, to simulate natural pigmentation)

  45. Tattooing • 30 million Americans have tattoos • 13% of adolescents and 40% of Americans aged 26 - 40 • Ancient practice: Egyptian mummies, Maori tribesmen, Thracian women of 5th Century Greece, Moors) • Tattooing still illegal in South Carolina and Oklahoma

  46. Tattooing • More than 50 different pigments and inks employed • Many contain heavy metals, phthalates, other endocrine disruptors and carcinogens • Some contain industrial grade printer’s ink or automobile paint

  47. Tattooing • FDA considers inks to be cosmetics (premarketing safety evaluation required) • FDA considers pigments to be “color additives” (no premarketing safety evaluation required)

  48. Risks of Tattooing • Tattooing associated with risky behaviors in adolescents • Infection • e.g., Staph, Strep, Mycobacteria, hepatitis B, C, syphilis, leprosy, and HIV (HIV risk theoretical – no cases identified to date) • Am Assn Blood Banks requires one-year wait between getting tattoo and donating blood • Allergic reactions

  49. Risks of Tattooing • Granulomas • Keloid formation • MRI complications • Swellings/burns • Image quality suffers (particularly with permanent mascara) • Removal problems

More Related