HuffingtonPost reports: What makes someone “beautiful”?
It’s a difficult question to answer, as we learned earlier this year from
journalist Esther Honig’s Photoshop experiment, in which she sent a picture of
herself to photo editors in 25 countries around the world and asked them to
“Make me beautiful.” The variety of results she received — some lightening her
already pale skin, some darkening it, some adding makeup, some adjusting the
skeletal structure of her face — challenged the idea that there is an ultimate
kind of beauty, a “perfect” woman.
But when journalist Priscilla Yuki Wilson replicated Honig’s experiment, she
found that her biracial identity caused things to play out differently. Se the photoshopped pictures after the cut....
“In contrast to Honig’s results, where her face became a canvas to express
more than a dozen contrasting beauty standards, I found that my face actually
challenged the application of photoshop in this instance,” Wilson wrote in a
post on her personal blog. “As a biracial women there is no standard of beauty
or mold that can easily fit my face.”
Half Japanese and half black, Wilson has fielded the question “What are
you?” far too often, compounding her struggle with society’s unattainable
standards of beauty.
“I am living in a culture that’s still adjusting to my kind of face,” she
explains. “I was taught that my natural self did not comply with conventional
standards set forth by society, saying fairer skin is better, straighter hair
is more attractive, and that skinny tastes good.”
How photo editors in 18 countries and the European Union responded to
Wilson’s request is representative of the variety of expectations that cultures
around the world have for women, and how universally difficult it can be to fit
in.
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