cinema_babe: (Eyecandy)
[personal profile] cinema_babe
Over on Facebook someone posted a link to a very thoughtful critique of Dove's Real Beauty campaign.

I get the writer's point, but I'm not with her 100%. Not that I disagree with her critique so much as I see the good far outweighing the bad. This is not to say that criticism is not necessary and welcome but that it sets up a conundrum of how do we encourage the best of what we have without neutralizing the good?

The writer had several specific things she was critical of and I want to take them one by one.

Dove’s parent company Unilever also owns brands such as SlimFast, Axe and Fair and Lovely (the last is a skin lightening cream sold overseas)
A corporate portfolio often has little to do with ad campaigns by the companies within that portfolio. As incongruous as it is, you can find wildly different companies under the same umbrella. I don't think that shows hypocrisy, it's just a quirk of business.

The people behind the Dove ads who work on ads the employ the same illusions the Real Beauty ads criticize
Well it's the ad business and if we've learned nothing from Mad Men is the the ad business is amoral. Just because they might do an ad for Victoria Secret it doesn't mean that they can't do an outstanding job for the Real Woman campaign. I think this type of argument is not an argument at all because that's what ad companies do: create ad campaigns for whomever pays for them.

The Dove Real Beauty print ads are Photoshopped
I wish that weren't true but I'm not surprised and it still doesn't change the message of the ad campaign. I don't know the extent of the photoshopping, but we can be sure that it's nothing like what is normally done to women's pictures in the media. While the writer talks about discussing this with someone involved in the campaign, she doesn't tell us if it's simple changes to account for things like excessive shine or looking washed out for bright lights or if they are making whole cloth changes in how a woman looks.

Whatever they do the women in these ads and commercials they still look like the women I see on the street. Their faces might be a bit more symmetric but hey, it's an ad, they're going to look for a certain amount of conventional facial beauty. Every society has a standard of beauty, they always have an always will. It's when they become unrealistic and should sucking that it becomes an issue and that is where we are today.

Why I think these ads are so important, and why I think they are strong despite anything amiss is that they push some very serious conversations into the mainstream. Getting anything this important into the mainstream dialogue is always more important than ideas tossed around in academia and feminist think-tanks.

There are things that those of us who might consider ourselves enlightened or progressive might know or think about but how deceptive and sexist advertising shapes the way we see what's in the mirror. However, these Dove ads aren't for us. They are for the other 99.8% of the women out there looking in the mirror and see themselves as old, ugly and/or fat. Spend some time in a dressing room before swimsuit season and it can break your heart how hyper critical women are about their own bodies. How much they hate the skin they live in.

The sight of a bunch of women of all different shapes and sizes standing proudly in their underwear with smiles on their faces is not an image that many women have ever seen. And certainly never in a mainstream ad for a popular beauty oriented product.

I think the writer may have missed an important point about the new Real Beauty Sketches Ad. We can quibble about the ad labeling things like lines or double chins as a negative. But to reduce that ad to "this is reinforcing stereotypes of beauty" is an oversimplification and I would posit, elitist. The message behind this ad is almost the opposite: We are overly critical about our looks.

If you look carefully, the pictures dictated to the artist by others looked more like the women than the pictures they dictated to him themselves. If we cannot see ourselves as we really are, how can we begin to dismantle the infrastructure of false expectations that entrap us. See your self the way you are and *then* I can teach you to love who you are. See yourself as something less than what you imagine "attractive" looks like and it becomes an impossible task.

Sometimes when I read articles like this I can see the point, but I also feel that sometimes he bulge of the curve get left behind while those of us who may be ahead of the curve pat ourselves on the back.

For all its worth, I support you Dove, keep up the good work.

Date: 2013-04-20 02:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shirleym.livejournal.com
See, my problem with the sketches ad in particular is that it is, very explicitly, reinforcing stereotypes of beauty. The message is "your appearance is your worth as a person", with a side helping of "but you're closer to the accepted beauty standard than you think" to make it seem empowering. One of the women in the ad says that feeling beautiful affects how you treat your kids and what jobs you apply for, and it's vital to your happiness. Now, maybe if you use a definition of "beauty" that actually means "self-esteem", that's true, but that's not what's going on here; it's quite the opposite. Real empowerment, which you will never ever see in an ad for soap, would be getting self-esteem from something other than how you look. It isn't "I'm more beautiful than I thought", it's "I'm valuable for more than my looks".

It's nice to see the variety of bodies in some of the Real Beauty ads. I'll give them that. But this one hit me completely wrong.

Date: 2013-04-20 04:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onecrazymother.livejournal.com
Our society's narrow sense of beauty irks me. I wanted to see sunsets, or opening flowers, or new babies, or smiling old people, or wind on sea, so I typed "beauty" into a search engine, and I got mostly ads for cosmetics.

Date: 2013-04-20 07:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tisiphone.livejournal.com
It's probably not fashionable to say it, but personally I do feel that way - how confident I feel about how I look influences how I interact with others. I wouldn't go so far as to say it "impacts everything", but it does make a difference.

Date: 2013-04-20 02:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] skitty.livejournal.com
This is really interesting, and I think you make some crucial points. Those of us who don't look for validation in conventional beauty standards may not need the reinforcement from Dove, but god knows most women do. If even one woman starts to feel better about herself as a result of Dove's campaign, then that's a positive benefit. Judging by the number of women I know who forwarded the recent video or shared it on Facebook, it obviously made an impression. If it's got people thinking about what it's saying, then again, that's a positive benefit.

Date: 2013-04-20 03:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] onecrazymother.livejournal.com
Wow, I'm so glad I get to see lots of people in various states of undress, being happy. Yay kink events and pagan festivals. I hadn't thought before about how much just that aspect of those events has been great for me.

Thinking about people who don't get to see that.... yeah, foreign culture at this point. I could see how someone could forget that for some people, that's the reality.

Date: 2013-04-20 02:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] horizonchaser.livejournal.com
All very good points. I don't think the ads emphasize the "your appearance is your worth" aspect, because I took it as being very literally true that many women do not know how beautiful they are. And there isn't anything wrong with being beautiful, we're just taught that a "good and nice girl doesn't admire her own beauty". Which is just as poisonous as "your appearance is your worth."

I tell my nieces they are beautiful as much as I praise their abilities and personal selves, and will smack down false modesty as being stupid. When they post a gorgeous photo, they should take pride in that as much as anything else and not belittle their beauty or feel they must fish for compliments.

That may not be deep, but take a look at any person you want, and watch how scary ugly turns into beautiful when that person is happy and accepted and self confident.

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