Ideology and Myths: The Fuel of Woman Abuse

Patricia J. Anderson

Indiana University Northwest

Social Problems, Soc 163, Winter 1983

Grade: A (in class also)

Ideology and Myths: The Fuel of Woman Abuse

Wife abuse was first seen as a social problem by feminists in the late 1960s and early 1970s. By sharing their research and experience in helping battered women they are trying to pull society’s head out of the sand so that they can see what a devastating problem it is. In more than 14 years, these feminists have not yet succeeded in making wife abuse a commonly known and understood problem.

The problem affects Battered women, the batterers, their children and extended families, the police, (called in, in cases called domestic violence), the judicial system (offers little or no help to alleviate the problem), the clergy (who usually are confided in and in turn send the battered wife back to the batterer), and human liberation in general.

“A battered woman is one who is repeatedly subjected to any forceful physical or psychological behavior by a man in order to coerce her to do something he wants her to do without any concern for her rights. To be classified as such, a couple must go through the battering cycle at least twice”.  1     

“It is estimated that 50-60% of all women will be battered victims at some point in their lives”.  1, 2  

“The problem includes physical and psychological abuse; both types of violence exist in battering couples and cannot be separated”.  1 

Myths

Many myths function that keeps wife abuse from being dealt with in a positive and helpful way by society; a few of the most common ones are:

ONLY A SMALL PERCENTAGE  OF THE POPULATION IS AFFECTED.

Like rape it is an unreported crime; it usually takes place at night, in the home, without witnesses. It is estimated that only 1/10 of cases are reported. Of 500 divorce suits filed in New York in 1976 – 57.4% listed physical abuse as the cause.

BATTERING OCCURS MORE OFTEN IN LOW-CLASS OR MINORITY WOMEN.

All socioeconomic classes, educational levels, income levels, cultures, and races are victims of wife abuse. Middle- and upper-class women are less likely to report it for fear of embarrassment and exposure of their batterer, who is a “pillar of the community”. A study in England revealed a high incidence among police, doctors, and service professionals (lawyers, executives, college professors, and elected officials).

BATTERED WOMEN ARE MASOCHISTIC OR DESIRE TO BE BEATEN.  

Case histories show no provocation in the majority of cases at all, or the precipitating factor may be something like a dinner served 5 minutes late. Batterers lose control because of their own internal reasons; this myth robs responsibility from the male. Out of thousands of women’s stories not one showed any signs of masochism.

BATTERED WOMEN CAN ALWAYS LEAVE.

They do not have the freedom to leave; she knows that her man is capable of gross violence; he makes chillingly frightening threats about what he will do to her friends or family if she leaves – she believes him!  Frequently she knows no one who will believe her. He keeps her isolated a great deal so that her sphere of helpers is minimal – usually she has nowhere to go.

Characteristics

Common characteristics of battered women and their batterers are quite revealing:

1.      SHE: Has low self-esteem.                        

HE: Has low self-esteem.

2.      SHE: Believes myths about wife abuse. 

HE: Believes in myths about wife abuse.

3.      SHE: Is a traditionalist, who strongly believes in family unity, and prescribed feminine stereotyped role in the family.

         HE: Is a traditionalist, and believes in male supremacy and the stereotyped masculine role in the family.

4.      SHE: Accepts responsibility for his actions.

         HE:   Blames others for his actions.

5.      SHE: Suffers from guilt yet denies the terror and rage that she feels.

         HE:   Is pathologically jealous.

6.      SHE: Presents a passive face to the world but has the strength to manipulate her environment enough to prevent increased violence and/or being killed.  

         HE:   Presents a dual personality.

7.      SHE: Has severe stress reactions, with psycho-physiological complaints.

         HE:   Has severe stress reactions, during which he uses wife battering to cope.

8.      SHE: Uses sex to establish intimacy.

         HE:   Frequently uses sex as an act of aggression to enhance self-esteem in view of waning virility. May be bisexual.

9.      SHE: Believes that no one will be able to help her resolve her problem except herself.

         HE: Does not believe his violent behavior should have any negative consequence.

Some battered women grew up witnessing their mothers abused by their fathers; some were treated like fragile dolls by their fathers; these pampering fathers taught their daughters that they were incompetent and had to be dependent on a man – sex role stereotyping.

An overwhelming majority (if not all) of batterers were their father’s apprentices; fathers showed them how to beat up mom, and some even let their son get a few licks in early on mom too – for practice. Definitely a learned behavior.

The core of the problem lies in the ideology perpetuated by the traditional attitudes shared by the wife, the batterer, and society (police, courts, and clergy). He MUST dominate and keep his wife in line; she sees him as her ruler who has superhuman abilities.

During hospitalizations for fractured ribs or jaws (or both), she thinks to herself that he may have gone a little overboard, but the dinner WAS served 10 minutes late. The batterer dotes over his wife after the beating brings flowers and candy, tells her how much he loves her, and begs forgiveness.

The husband is not sanctioned for his violence by his wife or society. If police are called to an acute battering episode, they don’t see it as a crime, they merely tell him to calm down; they see domestic violence as a nuisance, but they don’t arrest the batterer or report it as a crime. The wife is too terrified of what would happen if she pressed charges: they usually have enormous trouble in proving it and judges are not interested in sticking their noses in either.

His wife forgives him although during the acute battering incident he does not stop even when she is obviously severely injured. The wife has no legal action with any teeth in it to prevent another beating; police will not remove him from the house, so she must leave if she wants to get away from him.

I went to Haven House, a battered women’s shelter, in Hammond, In. The psychologist who runs it is Joan Cmar who was happy to share information with me because one of the solutions to help battered women is to spread understanding of the problem through as many people as possible.

Joan doesn’t hold much hope for the problem in Indiana. Since Reagan took office the federal funds that support the shelter have been cut drastically and she fears may be cut altogether. Donations are not enough to keep it open.

Right now Indiana offers no legal recourse or protection for the wife. The woman who manages to get out and get to the shelter can only bring what she can carry. The police will not go with her so that she may get her belongings. She faces starting life all over without clothes, money, or a place to live, (the head of the household all the money). 5

There is a bill now pending in the Indiana legislature that would allow women to press charges on their word alone and have the batterer arrested. A similar bill, when passed in Illinois, immediately brought out 1600 cases filed; only 2 batterers were prosecuted. 5 

She says the police do respond quickly if a batterer attempts to cause trouble at the shelter, so she feels safe.  5

The police and officials of the courts are mostly male, they frequently share some of the traditional ideas about a man’s right to dominate his wife; they help support the problem by turning their heads and blaming the victim – why doesn’t she just get divorced? 5

When I asked Joan about the clergy’s helpfulness (all denominations) she became quite angry. She says they are the worst! Most priests and ministers are also male (churches are quite traditional and sexist). They instruct battered women to return home, be better women and keep the family together at all costs. An extremely high percentage of batterers also engage in incest and child abuse toward their daughters. The clergy still think the family should stay together!  5  

She says there are no counselors in Northwest Indiana who are either knowledgeable about or trained to help violent men and their families. So even if the couple, by miracle, get into marriage counseling they have almost no possibility of ever having a violence-free relationship. Even in other parts of the country with expert counselors, almost no progress toward violence-free relationships – divorce is the only answer. If counseling were to work, the husband would need to give up a great deal of power, which is very unlikely. Also, unless the wife gets assertiveness training, she’s likely to marry another batterer.  5

A personal acquaintance of mine recently revealed that she is a battered wife. I was shocked because they own a very successful business and seem to be very nice people. She was beaten by her mother as a child; her husband and four of his brothers beat their wives just like their fathers did. This was my friend’s third abusive relationship.

I personally know a female anesthesiologist who is a victim of a battering husband. She had three babies in 30 months! Batterers don’t allow their wives to use birth control. The doctor lost her job because when she was called out on an emergency case the husband would sit at the nurse’s station in surgery and wait for her – he didn’t believe that some cases could take as long as they did. He ran into surgery one day to see if she left by the back door; this behavior let her secret out of the bag and the hospital couldn’t have him doing that again.

Society loses these women because they must gear every waking moment to seeing that life goes smoothly for their husbands so that they can avoid them getting upset and beating them again. Even if she works, he usually picks her up and takes her there; he doesn’t allow social relations with her coworkers. Most of the case histories that I have read reveal that whenever possible the men take their wives to work with them. (My personal acquaintance says that not only does she go to the business with him, but she can’t even grocery shop without him. To the outsider it looks like they are just so cozy).

Society as a whole is held captive to this pervasive ideology as long as it continues to invade the minds of the violent family’s children, thus ensuring another generation of oppressive batterers and their victims.

A great deal of money is spent and time wasted by the police having to go to “calm down” domestic violence.

Society loses these women because they must gear every waking moment to seeing that life goes smoothly for their husbands so that they can avoid them getting upset and beating them again. Even if she works, he usually picks her up and takes her there; he doesn’t allow social relations with her coworkers. Most of the case histories that I have read reveal that whenever possible the men take their wives to work with them. (My personal acquaintance says that not only does she go to the business with him, but she can’t even grocery shop without him. To the outsider it looks like they are just so cozy).

Solutions

-Continued and increased federal support for shelters.

-Laws to make wife abuse a crime. Mandatory 48-hour incarceration of batterers who have obviously beaten up their wives. This would involve police education and a change in attitudes to the problem. The batterer must be negatively sanctioned. Mandatory psychiatric help to those known to beat their wives.

-Hotlines for batterers, their children, and battered women. 2

-Educate educators about the problem and discuss its existence in schools; drug abuse is now taught in public schools. 2 

-Nurses and doctors should be taught to ask suspected cases if someone did this to them; this may very well open the subject to the victim, and it tells her that you would believe her and take it seriously. Records could be used later in court to prosecute batterers. 2

-The clergy need an educational overhaul to bring the problem to light with them.

-Movies about the realities can be enlightening. An increase in men’s liberation would help. Hopefully, awareness could be stimulated to encourage men to express their feelings more openly. Machoism really hurts and traps them too, with the traditional stereotypes.

-We could teach our children to be more expressive, especially boys – let them cry! Children are taught about why the clouds do what they do – why not teach them the psychology of why people do what they do?

-I would like to see more men like Rosie Greer in the public eye.

-Radical feminism is not the answer. The equal rights amendment will not change people’s minds or hearts. Women will not be free until men are too. I hope to see a new social movement for Human Liberation; men will be allowed to knit and cry, and women will be elected president or become pipefitters if they choose.

While researching this subject I learned about myself – I am a feminist, but I think the ones that are too radical have discouraged its real growth.

Bibliography 

1.      Walker, Lenore E. (1979). The Battered Women. Harper & Row.      

2.      Davidson, Terry. (1978). Conjugal Crime. Hawthorn.

3.      Roy, Maria. (1977). (Ed). Battered Women: A Psycho/sociological Study of Domestic Violence. Van Nostrand. 

4.      Personal acquaintance.

5.      Cmar, Joan. Counselor – Haven House, Hammond, IN.

6.      Personal friend, volunteer – Haven House, Hammond, IN.

Research Design: Touch and the Power to Heal

Indiana University

Principles of Sociology Soc 161, Fall 1982

Grade: Full Credit, 11 Points, “Good Paper”

A in Class; A Hypothesis

Physical contact (hugs, pats, shoulder squeezing, hand holding, etc.) affects the body in a positive manner both physically and psychologically; lack of physical contact has a negative effect on the body physically and psychologically.     

Observations

Football players are quite demonstrative with their physical contact. Anyone who has watched them get ready just before game time knows this to be true. These big tough macho men (who would be arrested for such behavior in any other circumstances) hug, squeeze, hold, hit, and embrace each other in groups of fifty or more. This physical contact with one another psyches up each individual and adds to team unity; their adrenaline is released which prepares them physically for rigorous activity.  1. During the game the physical contact continues with pats on the rear and hand slapping to keep spirits up, share the joy of a touchdown and stimulate another burst of adrenaline.

On the other hand, patients suffering from depression are not psyched up for life and are physically lethargic. Having worked with depressed patients, I have observed that they lack the ability to reach out to be touched; they lack receptiveness to others’ physical advances too. Depressed people seem unable to gather enough physical or psychological energy to respond. They isolate themselves because they feel isolated.

                                                     Test 1 

I would love to see what would happen if on a given Sunday half of the NFL teams refrained from all physical contact, other than what is needed to tackle and get the ball through their opponent’s defense. The opposing team would be allowed their usual pre-game physical bombardment of one another before the game.

Comparisons could then be drawn as to how the players felt about playing without their physical contact: were they as psyched up? Did they physically play as well? Were there more injuries than usual (compare statistics from previous play)? Do they feel that they should have beaten the team that they played? How much did they play up to their potential?

To ensure a spontaneous response from the team being tested they would not be told of the test procedure until arrived at the stadium prior to the game. After the game, the players would be questioned as to the differences that they observed with the elimination of the normal pre-game physicalness.

Statistics could be compared as to points scored, the number of fumbles, and the general effectiveness of the testing team. Hopefully, we could learn whether their physical contact really aids the team physically and psychologically.

                                                     Test 2  

I recommend doing touch histories on patients with depression. Family members and significant others who bring them to the hospital could be asked about the usual touching patterns in the families’ or patients’ life. Are they a family or a couple that is physically close? How do they touch? When? For how long? Is touching in a marital relationship only for sexual purposes? Have them make out a usual day-touching itinerary.

The patient could be questioned too. Comparisons here between what family members reported and what the patient reported may also be enlightening.

Ask the patient how his family was regarding touching during his childhood. Did he feel free to jump up on a parent’s lap? Perhaps one parent and not the other? Was there physical contact in the form of a pat on the head or maybe a bear hug? How would they like to be touched? Is it important for them to be touched? Was there a drastic change in their recent past (last 1-2 years) regarding their physical contact? Death divorce or other physical separation could decrease one’s physical contact behavior. Was there a substantial change in the amount of touching that was comfortable for the patient?

One true example a recall was a woman of 47 who had been married 26 years, had five children and described her family as quite physically expressive in their love: both parents hugged the children daily and the children frequently were seen with their arms around one another. When she had a radical mastectomy her husband and children were so frightened that they were unable to touch her as usual. The woman committed suicide before any help could be obtained for her and her family.

                                                     Test 3  

Psychiatrists and psychologists treating depressed patients could do a different study. One group of depressed patients could be given conventional therapy; the other group should be purposefully given physical contact along with conventional therapy. The counselors would need to decide how comfortable they felt with each type of physical contact and use it appropriately. A patient should be able to perceive it as sincere or the results would be tainted to say the least.

A sincere handshake could be initiated before the therapy session. The counselors should be positioned so that physical contact can be comfortably made during the discussion; squeezing of the shoulder, patting hand or knee and if possible a strong hug before leaving would serve well.

The two groups can be compared as to: did the touched patients show any signs of being more psyched up for life than the untouched? Can it initiate some adrenaline for them and thus increase their physical activity? As time goes on, the touched patient has the ability to respond to human contact. Can a team spirit feeling be generated in those without this feeling by having physical contact with them? Can we take a cue from football and use it to help the depressed patient?

                                                Hypothesis 

(Agree or Disagree)

I’m sure that without their usual touching behavior, the football teams could not function anywhere near their best. I’m sure that less team spirit could be assessed from them; without the team spirit and the adrenaline stimulation of their physical contact, they would win fewer games and have more injuries.

I think there would be a high correlation between the onset of depression and the lack of physical contact in depressed patients.

I don’t doubt that with proper controls and with therapists that felt ok about touching their patients, the patients who were purposely touched during the study would do better than those treated conventionally.  

                                                  Analysis 

If my research design were ever carried out, I hope that it would show in black and white just how important physical contact is. I hope people would THINK about how, why, when, and whom they touch. They may use it more often to express themselves at times when at a loss for sensitive enough words. Perhaps we could become more inclined to ASK for physical contact when we need it, realizing what it can do for us.

If fifty macho men (football players) can all hug one another why not encourage other groups to do the same? There are many groups that could attain cohesiveness with physical contact: a class of students studying for a big exam, a local chapter of Parents Without Partners, residents of a senior citizen home (staff could also join in), and any other group who could benefit from gaining a team spirit and increasing physical ability.

We know that newborns die without soft warm contact; the depressed patient’s situation would illustrate one of the things that can happen to adults with a lack of soft warm contact. If lack of soft warm contact can have such a drastic effect on the youngest of our species, then it MUST also affect even the oldest in some negative way.

Notes

1       Adrenaline – a neurotransmitter (chemical substance released at the neuromuscular junction) released in response to stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. This is also sometimes referred to as the fight or flight response. This is a protective mechanism of the body that is elicited in conditions that are other than basal.

The physical contact displayed by football players serves to elicit a sympathetic response which results in the release of adrenaline. Adrenaline serves to prepare muscles to run, jump, tackle, and in being generally ready to play. It does this by elevating blood pressure, pulse, respiration, and general metabolism which brings more blood and more oxygen to the muscles that they need to increase activity. If this was not done and the muscles were not ready with extra blood and oxygen, I’m sure that they would be more inclined to injury.

Why Do We Repeat the Same Dysfunctional Relationship Patterns Over and Over?

By Sharon Martin, LCSW 
~ 5 min read

At Blogs.Psychcentral.com

https://blogs.psychcentral.com/imperfect/2018/07/why-do-we-repeat-the-same-dysfunctional-relationship-patterns/?utm_source=Psych+Central+Weekly+Newsletter&utm_campaign=5390ad9ff6-GEN_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c648d0eafd-5390ad9ff6-29826629

Truth and Repair: How Trauma Survivors Envision Justice 

 

By Judith Lewis Herman, MD. (Author), Stacey Glemboski (Narrator). (2023)

From Amazon.com:  “From one of America’s most influential psychiatrists, a powerful manifesto for reimagining justice, based on the testimony of trauma survivors

The #MeToo movement brought worldwide attention to sexual violence, but while the media focused on the fates of a few notorious predators who were put on trial, we heard far less about the outcomes of those trials for the survivors of their abuse. 
  
The conventional retributive process fails to serve most survivors; it was never designed for them. Renowned trauma expert Judith L. Herman argues that the first step toward a better form of justice is simply to ask survivors what would make things as right as possible for them. In Truth and Repair, she commits the radical act of listening to survivors. Recounting their stories, she offers an alternative vision of justice as healing for survivors and their communities. 
  
Deeply researched and compassionately told, Truth and Repair envisions a new path to justice for all.”

The Cosmetic Industry:  The Externalization of Women’s Identity

Patricia J. Anderson

Advanced Psychology of Women, 561

De Paul University, Chicago, Illinois

1995

The Cosmetic Industry: The Externalization of Women’s Identity

                                       Abstract

Personal experience with the use of cosmetics led me to look at how the cosmetic industry got started and how it “hooked” women psychologically into believing that artificial beauty was a requirement of femininity. Patriarchal images of beauty have gone far beyond “powdered noses”. Beauty that was initially obtained through makeup and hair care products led to surgical procedures like facelifts and breast augmentation. While cosmetic surgeons’ knives carve into a women’s physical body, the scars are actually inflicted much deeper, into a women’s core – her sense of self. For this reason, I also look at the “choice” involved in cosmetic surgery through a feminist ethical lens.

Personally

My reason for doing research on makeup and cosmetic surgery was very personal. I started wearing makeup around age thirteen, in response to peer pressure from my friend Iris. She applied mascara to my reddish-blonde lashes and eyebrow pencil to my also light brows. What a drastic difference it made! For years I had lived with barely visible lashes and brows – how had I survived without makeup? I was hooked. I could never again go back to being plain and colorless.

My dad’s initial response to seeing me with makeup on was quite emphatic, “No daughter of mine is gonna wear that crap on her face! Go wash it off!” But dad wasn’t in charge of makeup – it was mom’s thing and mom said okay.

A few months later I came to the breakfast table without makeup on. Dad immediately threw up his hands covering his eyes (to shield himself from my ugliness) and said, “Jesus Christ, redhead go and put your makeup on”! Dad was kidding, right? He WAS a kidder. I’ll never know.  

At thirteen my beauty ego was very fragile, girls at this age are very influenced by what their fathers think of them. I was shattered! I really believed I was ugly without makeup on. Despite the fact that my feminist consciousness was raised a long time ago and the fact that I’ve never had a lover express any negativity about my appearance without makeup, I still rarely leave the house without makeup.

       Creating a Market for Makeup

According to Kathy Peiss (1994), Victorian times viewed women’s makeup as illegitimate and unrespectable. Many women had refrained from wearing makeup due to, religious beliefs, cultural traditions, and cost. Most working-class women who wore makeup were prostitutes, so respectability was an issue. A boundary had existed between respectability and promiscuity, gentility and vulgarity – paint marked that boundary (Peiss 1994).  

Things changed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, American women started wearing face powder, rouge, lipstick, and other visible cosmetics – makeup turned into an essential sign of femininity (Peiss 1994). Naomi Wolf (1991) says that since the industrial revolution, women’s “beauty” was used as a form of currency among men. Ideas about beauty and money became parallel economically (Wolf 1991). Capitalism set out to redefine a woman’s everyday needs; cosmetics became enmeshed within the mass consumer industry. The challenge was to define women’s external appearance and then make their cosmetics compelling to women (Peiss 1994). They did.

              Making Beauty a Necessity

Women’s faces started to look different in the culture’s mirrors: motion pictures, women’s periodicals and advertising store windows, fashion runways, and department stores. National advertising in women’s magazines became a dominant force by the early nineteen twenties. Advertising stressed the safety and cleanliness of the products and even claimed the product’s invisibility, guaranteeing women that they wouldn’t appear immoral or painted (Peiss 1994).

Egalitarian marketing techniques were employed. High-priced items were marketed in exclusive salons aimed at wealthy customers; lower-priced products were marketed to teenagers and working-class women in drugstores and discount beauty outlets. There were also specific ethnic markets that targeted African American, Hispanic, Asian, and other women of color (Peiss 1994).

To women who had devoted themselves to their families, the message made beauty an irresistible duty. One cosmologist said, “Don’t be ashamed of your desire for beauty” (Peiss 1994, p. 375). The logic of the popular idea that everyone could be beautiful led to the assertion that all women should be beautiful–it was a duty to husbands, and children, necessary for business success and vital to the attainment of romance. If you weren’t beautiful, you had yourself to blame (Peiss 1994).  

The relationship between femininity and appearance was reshaped by a beauty industry that promoted the externalization of the gendered self to be achieved cosmetically (Peiss 1994). The multi-billion dollar industry convinced women using deeply embedded feelings of fear, anxiety, and self-hatred to seek “hope in a jar” (Peiss 1994, p. 391).

   Cosmetics and African American Women

African American women’s lower economic status limited their ability to buy cosmetics. However, growing racial segregation and the migration of the Black middle class to the cities led entrepreneurs to develop businesses marketed to Black consumers. One of the leading Black businesses pioneered the development of beauty products for African American women (Peiss 1994).  

Black women’s grooming centered around hair care. Entrepreneurs marketed hair tonics (straighteners for kinky hair) to Black women by way of almanacs and ad cards that used African American ministers and school teachers to promote the products (Peiss 1994).

Black women found good employment opportunities in a sex and race-segregated market within the beauty culture. Here was a business that was in great demand, easy to learn, and required little capital to get started. This resulted in the establishment of businesses in homes, small shops, and door-to-door sales. High Brown face powder was sold door to door by an army of agents (Peiss 1994).      

White racism in the beauty culture exploited issues like the natural inferiority of Blacks noting their unruly hair, promiscuity, and sloppy dress, and marketed toward the Black woman’s desire for respectability. There was controversy over the adaptation of white aesthetics, but the fact that products were marketed door to door among friends and neighbors fostered a web of support and assistance to Black woman’s culture (Peiss 1994).

Female Development of a Remade Self

The hospital nursery sweeps an infant girl’s hair into a curl, by age one year her ears are pierced, by age two her nails are polished, she has ribbons in her hair, and ruffles on her skirts. Femininity becomes associated with beauty, beauty becomes a part of a girl’s self-perception; pretty is the framework for her self-image (Freedman 1990).       

Rhoda Unger and Mary Crawford (1992) discuss the fact that much of girls’ play revolves around glamour. Makeup is flavored like candy and geared toward girls as young as three. Toy stores market numerous hair and nail products, especially for little girls (Unger & Crawford 1992). The prettiest, most popular fashion doll, Barbie, even has her own makeup. Cosmetic kits for the girls themselves, reassure parents that they are suitable for children as young as three and promise to help their daughters create dozens of fashion looks. After all, she’s only putting on the same disguise that mommy wears. Parents approve of her beautifying herself; she learns that her own face, though pretty, is inadequate, needing to be made lovelier–a double message fostering negative body image and self-doubt (Freedman 1990). Girls learn that their faces and bodies are not good enough and need improvement (Unger & Crawford 1992). Girls are surrounded by constant subtle demands for beauty that become invisible once internalized. They believe that beauty is something they want – it’s a fun choice they make.  

Beauty contestants can be very young. Freedman (1990) discusses the opinions of pediatrician Lee Salk about beauty contests for girls. Girls feel tremendous pressure to accept and identify with exaggerated images of beauty. When they realize that they lack the winning look, suffer deep feelings of inadequacy. Nearly half of twenty thousand teenage girls in a survey said they frequently felt ugly (Freedman 1990).  

Compared to boys, twice as many teen girls want to change their appearance and a greater number of girls are unhappy with a part of their body. Girls think other girls are better looking than they are; boys think other boys are less attractive than themselves. The smarter a boy is, the more satisfied he is with his looks; there is no similar correlation among girls (Freedman 1990). Freedman (1990) thinks that’s probably because the brighter a girl is the more she realizes “she can never attain the beauty ideal” (p. 390).

The socialization of girls teaches them to seek their identity through male attention. To obtain that attention they must conform to societal demands for beauty defined by white heterosexual males. Under these circumstances, girls really don’t have a choice in seeking beauty. The connection between appearance and worthiness can be so deeply ingrained in puberty that a woman is insecure about her appearance (and herself) for the rest of her life (Freedman 1990). This is true of feminist women, as I serve to demonstrate.

Puberty is the time when differences in self-esteem between the sexes start to take place (Unger & Crawford 1992). The enactment of the beauty role is shaped by the way a girl’s father reinforces her appearance (Freedman 1990). I now understand why my dad’s behavior had such a powerful impact on my emerging sense of self.

Makeup has become an essential prop necessary to the development of womanhood. Babysitting money is spent on mascara and bust developers (Freedman 1990). When I was eighteen I told my friends that I didn’t need much A newspaper printed an ad to potential money while I lived at home – my only expenses were makeup and hair spray! Little did I realize just how true and how sad that was.

A newspaper printed an ad to potential advertisers from a teen magazine: “Seventeen readers don’t love you and leave you. As adults 34% still rinse with the same mouthwash and 33% use the same nail polish. Talk to them in their teens and they’ll be customers for life” (Freedman 1990, p. 392). Cosmetic advertisers have been shown to affect the “conception of reality” of teen girls; a girl learns rather than to ask the mirror, “Who am I?” to ask, “What should I look like?”, illustrating a distorted identity that sees its goal as packaging the self as a product (Freedman 1990, p. 392).

Susan Brownmiller (1984) said it well, “Cosmetics have been seen historically as proof of feminine vanity, yet they are proof if anything, of feminine insecurity, an abiding belief that the face underneath is insufficient unto itself.” (Brownmiller 1984, p. 158-159).

Even cosmetic surgery is directed at young girls through advertisements in teen magazines. Parents pay for girls, not boys, to have plastic overhauls, provided by a medical system that reinforces myths about female beauty (Freedman 1990). Girls learn that their desirability is measured by their looks and that they can never measure up, no matter how hard they try (Unger & Crawford 1992). These societal messages will keep cosmetic manufacturers and cosmetic surgeons in business.   

Patriarchy profits financially and perpetuates its control of women through this psychological phenomenon. Women who are beautiful, don’t see themselves such, but their so-called success makes them vulnerable to exploitation – because of their beauty (Freedman 1990). Women really can’t win.

     Cosmetic Surgery: A View of the Knives

Morgan (1991) displayed a page of knives, scissors, needles, and sutures used in cosmetic surgery in her essay, “Women and the Knife: Cosmetic Surgery and the Colonization of Women’s Bodies”. She suggested that her readers look at them carefully, for a long time, and to imagine them cutting into your skin (Morgan 1991). I did.

As a nurse, my first glance simply revealed surgical instruments – no big deal. Then I looked at them with care, for a long time, and imagined them being used on me as the author suggested. When I looked through my feminist lens, I saw mutilating, controlling devices used by patriarchy to manipulate women, to make women fit the image of beauty defined by white men. I saw how far beyond powder the industry had come and how enormous the greed for profit and control had taken patriarchy.

The technological beauty imperative gives cosmetic surgeons the powerful and explicit mandate to explore, break down, and rearrange women’s bodies (Morgan 1991). Cosmetic surgery is an example of the medical system’s power to define, not only what is normal or pathological, but what is beautiful. No aspect of medical training certifies physicians to evaluate beauty. The message is: “The ideal woman is made, not born, with a little help from the surgeon’s scalpel” (Unger & Crawford 1992, p. 334).

Kathryn Morgan (1991) quotes a plastic surgeon (director of plastic surgery education at a university): ” … I think people who go for surgery are more aggressive, they are the doers of the world. It’s like makeup. You see some women who might be greatly improved …, but they’re, I don’t know, granola-heads or something, and they just refuse.” (Morgan 1991, p. 26). Frightening, this man teaches future surgeons and no doubt perpetuates these attitudes.      

Weight standards for attractive women have been reduced in our society (Unger & Crawford 1992). Even Barbie has gotten thinner than since her appearance in nineteen fifty-nine (Unger & Crawford 1992; Freedman 1990). In such a society, puberty itself has negative consequences for girls whose normal development includes increases in fatty tissue. Girls are seen as lacking what’s defined as normal – boys’ lean bodies, also causing a girl to deviate from the “ideal” thin female image (Unger & Crawford 1992).

The most popular cosmetic surgery in nineteen ninety was liposuction. Fat cells are vacuumed from beneath the skin – never to return. Women risk their lives in surgical procedures that promise to make them fit the imposed image of a lean body. Liposuction has resulted in at least twelve deaths from hemorrhages or embolisms (Morgan 1991).

Facelifts (an umbrella term for several procedures) are recommended to women in their early forties with subsequent repeats every five to fifteen years, costing $2,500 to $10,500. Various styles of rhinoplasties (nose jobs) are available and styles go in and out of fashion from time to time. For $2,000 to $3,000 they will whittle down your nasal bone or add a piece of bone from another part of your body that will answer fashion’s call (Morgan 1991). In one study thirty percent of women said they would have a face-lift if they could afford it (Unger & Crawford 1992).     

Dr. Robert Mendelsohn (1982) says women frequently ask him about getting plastic surgery, women he knows are looking to cure problems in their marriages that they attribute to their inability to qualify as a model for Vogue. He doesn’t encourage plastic surgery and thinks its use other than in correcting true traumatizing disfigurement, ” … is the biggest rip-off on the medical scene” (Mendelsohn 1982, p. 39). Mendelsohn (1982) mentions one female plastic surgeon who said that some of her peers act as if they’re hairdressers and “give the field a bad name” (Mendelsohn 1982, p. 39).

            Feminist Biomedical Ethical Perspectives

One of the reasons Morgan (1991) gives for writing about cosmetic surgery is that the field of bioethics has been relatively silent about the issues present in this area of medicine, feminist or otherwise. Morgan (1991) thinks that feminists need to ask why women would reduce themselves to potentialities to fit the heterosexual image, illustrated by an enormous and growing demand for cosmetic surgery. Women invest years of their savings to fix natural flaws through dangerous and painful operations to make their bodies fit images designated by fashion editors (Morgan 1991).

The relationship between the means and the ends is no longer unilinear, it has become circular, with the new technologies presenting the possibility of new ends. The possibility of what one might desire has new objectives added. Technology’s role has become to transcend, control, transform, exploit, and destroy; its object is viewed as inferior, thus justifying it’s higher purpose in providing a fix (Morgan 1991). This is congruent with what traditional bioethics has historically done – used rationalization to justify what doctors are already doing (Sherwin 1992).

We’ve become technological subjects and objects, transformable with the ability to literally create ourselves with biological engineering. Technology plays the role of transcendence, transformation, control, exploitation, or destruction of the object, viewed as inferior.  A higher purpose is served in perfecting the object because it’s harmful or evil. To the Western medical model, the body is a machine whose parts can be replaced (Morgan 1991). One plastic surgeon clarifies his role, “Patients sometimes misunderstand the nature of cosmetic surgery. It’s not a shortcut for diet and exercise. It’s a way to override the genetic code” (Morgan 1991, p. 31). 

Most women are socialized to accept the knives of technology in Western societies. Knives can be used to heal: saving the life of a baby in uterine distress, removing cancerous growths, straightening crooked spines, or giving back functioning to arthritic fingers. But other knives perform episiotomies and other types of genital mutilation, remove our deviant tendencies by cutting out our ovaries, unnecessarily amputate our breasts with prophylaxis used as justification, or in cases where less drastic measures could have been employed, slice out uteruses of women beyond childbearing age or of those of undesirable color, and perform unnecessary cesarean sections so doctor’s time isn’t delayed by nature (Morgan 1991).

The skin is nature’s vital protective barrier that protects and contains our body’s integrity; any time skin is broken you are at risk. It should never be taken lightly (Morgan 1991). Morgan (1991) refers to the knives of cosmetic surgery as, magic knives, in a patriarchal white supremacist culture. I’m afraid of these knives that have historically illustrated great ease in penetrating and controlling women – beyond the skin.  

After listening to the voices of women who underwent cosmetic surgery, Morgan (1991) gives examples and assessments of their various reasons: “I’ve gotten my breasts augmented. I can use it as a tax write-off” – professional advancement and economic benefit (33); “There will be a lot of new faces at the Brazilian Ball”, – class and status symbol (33); “If your parent had puffy eyelids and saggy jowls, your going to have puffy eyelids and saggy jowls”, – control, liberation from parents, avoid hereditary (33); “… we want a nose that makes a statement, with tip definition and strong bridge line”, – domination and strength (33); “A teacher who looks like an old bat or has a big nose will get a nickname”, – avoid cruelty and aging (33); “I’ll admit to a boob job” (Miss America 1986), – competitiveness, attain prestige and status (33); “People in business see something like this as showing an overall aggressiveness and go-forwardness the trend is to, you know, be all that you can be”, – success and personal fulfillment (33). Her list went on to include reasons such as a gift to self, erasing a decade of hard work, economic gain, possible denial of grandmotherhood, emotional control, and happiness (Morgan 1991).

Sixty to seventy percent of cosmetic surgery patients are female. Why, when the risks are so great, are women willing to sacrifice other parts of their lives to have reconstructed bodies? Risks include bleeding, infection, embolism, unsightly scars, skin loss, blindness, disability, pulmonary edema, facial nerve injury, and death. Despite these facts, medical ethics don’t discuss these issues (Morgan 1991). As a feminist health professional, I feel that our silence on the issue makes us complicit in enlarging the scope of avenues to patriarchal power.

The extent that patients and cosmetic surgeons are committed is shocking to what Morgan (1991) sees as, “one of the deepest of original philosophical sins, the choice of the appearance over the real” (p. 28). Technologically created appearances are perceived as being real (Morgan 1991).        

Morgan (1991) thinks we are technologizing women’s bodies in Western culture. Cosmetic surgery is moving out of the sleazy, suspicious, deviant, or pathologically narcissistic, to the norm. With this shifting, it may actually become deviant not to have cosmetic surgery. This changing societal perception has the potential to lead to viewing those who don’t elect cosmetic surgery as deviant (Morgan 1991). Cosmetic surgery has gone far beyond the “duty” that makeup became in the nineteen twenties. Morgan’s prophecy is not at all far-fetched. 

                    Silicone Breast Implants

Breast augmentation with silicone implantation is the second most frequently performed plastic surgery. Over one million women have had these implants, costing from $1,500 to $3,000 (Morgan 1991). “Jacobs (a plastic surgeon … ) constantly answers the call for cleavage. `Women need it for their holiday ball gowns'” (Morgan, 1991, p. 25).

Augmented women appear to have a higher incidence of breast cancer (Morgan 1991). To date, there have been seventy-two deaths and ninety-one thousand injuries related to silicone implants (Winfrey 1995a).

Plastic surgeons and manufacturers rationalize that silicone breast implants are a matter of a woman’s free choice, after all, it’s an “elective” procedure. However, women should think seriously about trusting physicians and manufacturers who not only stand to profit significantly by satisfying women’s “choices”, but who are the very same white males who dictate the patriarchal beauty images that women “choose” to comply with. 

Oprah Winfrey (1995a) recently did a show on the controversy over breast silicone implants; she had Dow Corning’s Stephanie Burns, Manager of Women’s Health and FDA Issues, and Dow’s chairman and CEO Richard Hazleton on the show. Audience members described symptoms they began to experience soon after receiving silicone breast implants: migraines, numbness in hands and fingers, terrible rashes on the chest, axilla, and down their sides, rock-hard breasts, and burning pain in the breasts and armpits (Winfrey 1995a).

Other than migraines, these signs directly relate to the areas of the body near the breasts. However, doctors told these women they didn’t know what caused their symptoms and mammograms failed to show abnormalities (Winfrey 1995a). Recent studies demonstrate that mammograms are very difficult to interpret because implants block X-rays by casting a shadow on surrounding tissue (Morgan 1991). 

It’s now common knowledge that Dow Corning suppressed negative data about the safety of their silicone gel implants. Women who have received the implants say that they have led to the development of autoimmune diseases; diseases in which the body’s own cells attack themselves. A disease that may very well correlate with the psychological phenomenon involved in the negative body image that led women to obtain implants. It’s almost as if the body was speaking out metaphorically through the development of autoimmune responses; the body’s way of expressing the evil it has experienced.   

Audience members (Winfrey 1995a) knew their doctors thought they were crazy because they couldn’t find answers to their symptoms; the women felt like they were losing their minds. Miraculously, their symptoms went away when the implants were removed. Some women who had had implants learned, after having other types of surgeries, that their surgeons found silicone gel on their livers, uteruses, and ovaries. Autopsies have revealed gel in the brains of implanted women (Winfrey 1995a). 

Stephanie Burns (Winfrey 1995a) said that the implants can cause local complications: infection, capsule formation around the implant, hardening of the breast, and rupture and that when rupture outside of the capsule occurs, the gel can migrate. Burns (Winfrey 1995a) also admitted that when migration occurs the gel and implants must be removed. One woman showed the actual gel that had leaked out of her implant into her rib cage and lymph nodes. It was obvious that the sticky, stringy material would be difficult, if not impossible, to remove from the inside of the body (Winfrey 1995a).        

Burns (Winfrey 1995a) said that eighteen studies have come to the same conclusion, there is no correlation

between the implants and autoimmune or other diseases.

Burns (Winfrey 1995a) said this despite the fact, (brought out by audience members), that the package inserts actually LISTS scleroderma and rheumatoid arthritis (autoimmune diseases) as possible side effects. Women in Winfrey’s (1995a) audience said that they didn’t see package inserts – the packages are opened in surgery and physicians have not shared the package inserts with them. I wonder if the physicians themselves read the inserts? My guess is that the good old boy network mentality could allow some doctors to simply trust the manufacturer. 

Richard Hazleton said he doesn’t believe the implants are causing the women’s problems. Hazleton suggested that women needed to get beyond their anger and really need to understand the facts. He repeatedly referred to women’s choice in having implants (Winfrey 1995a).   

Many of the women said Dow did not follow ethical standards because women were not informed of the possible dangers. According to an audience member, the FDA said that it’s up to the company to prove that the implants were safe, not the responsibility of the medical community to prove that they’re not safe (Winfrey 1995a). I think both the manufacturer and the physicians are responsible. One woman in the audience said that “buyer beware” is not an acceptable practice (Winfrey 1995a). Both of Dow’s representatives kept citing the evidence from the studies that claim no correlation between the implants and any disease. A woman in the audience said, “We are the evidence. Study us!” (Winfrey 1995a). A great idea!

Historically women have been socialized to use beauty as a power (Morgan 1991). Morgan (1991) includes a quote from Mary Wollstonecraft from 1792, “Taught from infancy that beauty is a woman’s scepter, the mind shapes itself to the body and roaming round its gilt cage, only seeks to adorn its prison” (p. 34). Morgan (1991) asks whether women today are making free choices to have cosmetic surgery or are too simply adorning their prisons?

            Psychological Aspects of the “Choice?”

An inexcusable tragedy is that women expect that plastic surgery will fix their lives, not just change their features. They soon discover that even fixed, they’re not good enough and the same problems still exist. The psychological impact is likely to produce an even deeper depression than before the surgery when the subsequent disillusionment sets in (Mendelsohn 1982).

Women receive complex negative messages about their bodies which can lead to low self-esteem and alienation from one’s physical and sexual selves. These negative attitudes remain throughout a woman’s life and can result in constant worry over weight, looks, and feeling unsatisfied with her physicality. Despite the fact that these negative body images are distorted one researcher claims that there is an “epidemic of `flesh loathing’ among women (Unger & Crawford 1992, p. 333). Cosmetic surgery is increasingly viewed as a cure for aging and body variance (Unger & Crawford 1992).  

Beauty’s affirmation brings with it privileged heterosexual affiliation which includes forms of power not available to the plain, ugly, old, or those unable to reproduce. Women who seek cosmetic surgery have compelling voices; their voices tell of their search for transcendence, achievement, liberation, and power. The youth and beauty artificially created by the surgery doesn’t only appear to, but often actually does (emphasis added) give a woman a sense of identity that she, to some extent, had a choice in. Increasing her desirability to men (especially white men) offers the possibility to raise her status socially and economically (Morgan 1991). 

A woman’s beauty is a valued commodity. Beauty may be a kind of power for women, but their looks can be used in exchange for financial and material gains. Furthermore, when males treat females well it validates their beauty and enhances their social standing (Unger & Crawford 1992).

In the commitment to pursue beauty, a woman integrates her life with a consistent set of values and choices, bringing with it societal approval which results in an increased sense of self-esteem. The process of acquiring cosmetic surgery may expose a woman to people who treat her body in a caring way, something women frequently lack in their lives on a daily basis. The pursuit of beauty through transformation is frequently associated with experiences of self-creation, fulfillment, transcendence, and being cared for – powerful experiences. At the same time that beauty can confer an increase in self-esteem to a woman, it also involves being entrapped by its interrelated contradictions (Morgan 1991).

According to cosmetic surgeons, women come to their offices demanding: “Bo Derek” breasts, and nose reductions, frequently sought by Jewish women to obtain an Aryan look, Western eyes, sought by Asian women, and light skin, through the use of toxic bleaching agents, sought by Black women. The goal isn’t simply beautiful, but to mold oneself to fit racist, anti-Semitic, White, Anglo-Saxon, and Western images (Morgan 1991). For women, this molding is at the expense of their precious selves.   

Initially one might argue that it’s a choice, but Morgan (1991) argues what appears to be the result of reflection, deliberation, and a self-creating choice signals conformity at a deeper level. The images of male-identified beauty sometimes live as ghosts in the reflective awareness of women clothed in a diffuse manner. It’s not always obvious to women that their bodies are being viewed as raw material, primitive entities, seen only as potentials for exploitation by the colonizing culture (Morgan 1991). 

Sometimes the culture’s power source is explicit, it’s brothers, fathers, male lovers, or cosmetic surgeons who offer free advice on how they can cure deformities and problems at women’s gatherings. Sometimes the diffuse power dominates a woman’s consciousness without an apparent outside source (Morgan 1991). That unapparent source is her own internalization of patriarchal values. 

Women who are involved in self-surveillance behaviors, like fixing their make-up all the time, or monitoring everything they eat, are maintaining obedience to the patriarchal powers that be. The men that women transform themselves for are male-supremacist, heterosexist, ageist, ableist, racist, anti-Semitic, and classist (Morgan 1991). Women don’t see this because their so-called decision comes out of internalized values that tell them they’re not pretty enough. The same self-blame that occurred in the nineteen twenties in regard to the use of makeup, happens to women today in regard to cosmetic surgery. The basic phenomenon is the same, the behavior that results from the internalization digs in deeper today.         

Coercion and domination are frequently camouflaged by theories and rhetoric that appear benevolent, voluntary, and therapeutic. Technology’s ideological manipulations serve to destroy and disadvantage aspects of women’s integrity. Rather than escaping the constraints of their given physicality they are becoming more vulnerable, in seeking independence they are actually more dependent on male assessment (Morgan 1991).

The woman who seeks cosmetic enhancement seems to fit the paradigm of making a rational choice, but she makes that choice at a significant cost to herself in terms of lengthy post-operative pain and in terms of financial costs (health insurance doesn’t cover elective cosmetic surgery). The term elective has a seductive role in the ideological camouflage regarding apparent choice (Morgan 1991).

Loni Anderson discussed her cosmetic surgeries on the Oprah Winfrey Show. Loni admitted to having two breast reductions and having her eyes done. Winfrey (1995b) asked Loni, “You believe if you can do it – do it?” Loni answered, “I think it’s maintenance, it’s not changing, it’s maintenance” (Winfrey 1995b). Like car maintenance, if you don’t change the oil every three thousand miles you’re engine will be destroyed. What will happen to women’s identities if they don’t do maintenance? Maintenance is certainly a frighteningly harmless-sounding description of what is increasingly becoming an expectation for women. 

Morgan (1991) quotes an article marketed toward homemakers, “For many women, it’s no longer a question of whether to undergo plastic surgery—but what, when, by whom and how much” (28). Just as makeup came to define femininity in the nineteen twenties, today’s cosmetic surgery is becoming necessary for the “maintenance” of femininity.

As cosmetic surgery becomes more and more normalized in the media, women who refuse to submit will be viewed in one way or another as deviant. Their stigmas will include being viewed as unliberated, and uncaring about their appearance, which is considered a disturbed gender identity by some healthcare professionals, and as refusing to be all they can be (Morgan 1991). Imagine an ad where therapists offer to help women to overcome their fear of cosmetic surgery: “Gentle, caring therapist will help you overcome your fear of plastic surgery. You just need a little help – we can help you to attain YOUR dream of ultimate beauty!”

“…  the technological imperative and the pathologic inversion of the normal are coercing more and more women to “choose” cosmetic surgery (Morgan 1991, p. 41). Normal variations in women’s bodies are redefined as deformities, ugly protrusions, inadequate breasts, and unsightly fat areas, all designed to magnify feelings of shame, and disgust and see relief in what cosmetic surgeons offer (Morgan 1991). 

Although admittedly not likely to ever be achieved, Morgan (1991) says that women could collectively choose to exercise their power and refuse cosmetic surgery. Refusal holds the possibility of drastically affecting the market, possibly leading surgeons back to healing (Morgan 1991).

Morgan (1991) suggests that feminists not turn away from women who chose cosmetic surgery, as this decision may be one of the only decisions that she perceives as having power over her life. It is essential that we acknowledge the power of the gender-constituting, identity-confirming role femininity plays in bringing a woman into existence, while at the very same time making her a patriarchal-defined object. Under these circumstances, refusal may mean renouncing one of the only life-conferring choices a woman may have. While cosmetic surgeons are flooded with new clients and new research in the field is rapidly leading to more body parts becoming objects of redoing, it may be that the best we can hope for is to increase awareness of the numerous double-binds and compromises that affect all women’s lives (Morgan 1991).

In Conclusion

Morgan suggests that women could protest in a culturally liberated manner with events such as Ms. Ugly/America/Canada contests utilizing cosmetic surgery to attain the right look (Morgan 1991). If we cringe at the idea of women altering themselves to win a Ms. Ugly contest, Morgan (1991) says it may just make the point of how strongly the beauty imperative has us all hooked. One might think of these surgeries as mutilations, but Morgan (1991) says it’s just as mutilating to de-skin and alter healthy tissues to go with the flow of fashion.

A revolt Morgan (1991) suggests is to parallel the current market for breast implants with commercial protest booths (set up at health conventions and outside of cosmetic surgeons’ offices) with before and after photos of penises, the display signs might read, “The Penis You Were Always Meant to Have” (p. 46).  

Perhaps feminists could also develop a continuum of handsomeness for males, similar to the one-to-ten model devised to judge female beauty. It might be fun for feminists and has the potential to even raise the consciousness of non-feminists. Women might be more inclined to see how ridiculous and damaging the beauty imperative is.       

Cosmetic surgery’s language fits with the surreal images that women are expected to comply with. Another word for cosmetic surgery is plastic surgery, the word “plastic” is actually more descriptive of the image imposed. Even the word augmentation is revealing to one with a feminist consciousness. Wolf (1991) summed things up well, “The beauty myth generates low self-esteem for women and high profits for corporations as a result” (p. 49). The cosmetic industry demonstrates how very personal the political/economical really is.

                                    Work Cited

Brownmiller, S. (1984). Femininity. New York: Linden Press/Simon Schuster.

Freedman, R. (1990). “Myth America grows up”. In Issues in feminism an introduction to women’s studies. (Ed) Sheila Ruth. Second Edition. Mountain View, CA: Mayfield Publishing, pp. 384-393.

Mendelsohn, R, M.D. (1982). Male practice: How doctors manipulate women. Chicago: Contemporary Books.

Morgan, K. Pauly. (1991, Fall). “Women and the knife: Cosmetic surgery and the colonization of women’s bodies”  Hypatia. 6  (3), pp. 25-53.

Peiss, K. (1994). “Making faces: The cosmetic industry and the cultural construction of gender, 1890-1930”. In Unequal sisters. Second Edition. (Eds) Vicki L. Ruiz & Ellen Carol DuBois. New York: Routledge, pp. 372-394.  

Sherwin, S. (1992). No longer patient feminist ethics and health care. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.

Unger, R., & Crawford, M. (1992). Women and gender feminist psychology. New York: McGraw-Hill.

Winfrey, O. (1995a, October 13,). Topic: Controversy over silicone breast implants. On The Oprah Winfrey Show. The American Broadcasting Company, Channel 7. Chicago: Harpo Productions, Inc.    

Winfrey, O. (1995b, November 9,). Topic: Loni Anderson speaks out about her divorce from Burt Reynolds. On The Oprah Winfrey Show. The American Broadcasting Company, Channel 7. Chicago: Harpo Productions, Inc.    

Wolf, N. (1991). “Work”. The beauty myth: How images of beauty are used against women. New York: William Morrow & Company, pp. 20-57.