When most girls are very young, their thoughts and imagination became their first, along with a beautiful wedding dress, perfect hair and delicate waist, the beloved Disney Princess' light You can see the heroine. They grew a little, played with Barbie, dressed up for her on the beach, or met Ken. Shortly, the magazines are read The fear of the movie star dresses, the perfection outline of the model of her body, or Victoria's secret fashion show, she is very calm and calm.
Beauty is an uncertain standard and constantly changing appearance. People have pursued beauty from the beginning, but the standards of each culture are different. According to the present ideal, no matter how beautiful the standard is over time, the beauty of the true body is an unfeasible standard.
Social attitudes, values ββand beliefs - ideas for beauty, differences, and even our usual concepts of concepts are subject to cultural influence to a considerable degree. To understand how the standard of beauty has changed for years, you may want to see a movie made in the 20th century. Artwork can also provide standard clues. It is the same for toys, especially dolls. For example, what kind of advice Barbie suggests for beauty standards? What kind of advice do you propose to your idea of ββ"the beauty that can be seen by bystanders" in your research? How about the standard change? What kinds of events and ideas are stimulated by these changes?
Based on ever-changing cultural values, time consuming standards of beauty occurred historically, and paintings show a variety of standards of different beauty. However, relatively young people, skin smooth, balanced body, regular function is traditionally considered the most beautiful in history. A strong indicator of physical beauty is "average". When facial images are averaged to form a composite image, the facial image gradually approaches the "ideal" image and is thought to be more attractive. This was the first attention in 1883. Francis Galton combined photos of vegetarian and culprit's face to see if they have a typical facial appearance. By so doing he noticed that the composite image is more attractive than any single image.
Other scholars like Tracy Owens Patton have said the beauty industry and focused on food procurement as white and European beauty standards. African-American women must follow these prejudicest aesthetic criteria for hair and body images. Slave women in Africa are regarded as criteria for white females and tend to receive better treatment if they have the same body shape as mild skin or white women. African-American women must change the appearance of their hair to satisfy the European beauty standard since childhood. Hairdressing salons are a way for African-American women to organize regional empowerment and health education