Preview

Are Beauty Contests Harmful To Women

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
498 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Are Beauty Contests Harmful To Women
Melanie Amento
Professor Waite
CO-141-1
April 25, 2013
Are beauty contests harmful to women? Beauty pageants degrade women to mere objects. Such a competition is the exploitation of women by men and other women. If the beauty competition was based on skill or ability, that would be fine. But nowadays people judge them for their outer appearance. For example, if five people were running in a race, only one will win. There is no doubt as to who ran faster. There is also no need for anyone to judge such competitions. These competitions also affect the self-esteem of some women who feel that a size ten isn’t good enough for the competitions. In every pageant or competition, you always see every contestant at a size zero to five. This brings a lot of high self-esteems down because they feel that the world revolves around skinny models. Beauty contests are well promoted by the media, with television and images, which influence young women’s opinions on appearance. The participants of these contests are poor role models for these girls as they set impractical body weight, breast size and clear skin standards. This is another way of saying you have to be perfect in order to even compete in these competitions. This sets the idea for an ideal female body, which only a minority of women can then become incredibly harmful to young women by encouraging dieting, eating disorders, and cosmetic surgery, or simply making them feel inadequate and ugly. The moment women flaunt themselves, as in beauty pageants, they become an object to be degraded and exploited sex object for a year. Not only is low self-esteem a major negative effect that grows from beauty pageants, but also so are eating disorders. In our society, fifteen percent of women have eating disorders. Miss America from 2008 is a recovering anorexic. It has been tested that one out of every one hundred women between the ages of ten and twenty are starving themselves to death. Striving to be a beauty queen is a danger

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Lindsay Lieberman explains how child pageantry causes emotional, physical, and monetary effects on both the competitors and the parents; this is the central claim of “Protecting Pageant Princesses: A Call for Statutory Regulation of Child Beauty Pageants.” Minor claim number one is that pageants can cause detrimental effects on a young woman such as depression, eating disorders, and body image issues that accelerate into lifetime problems. Brook Breedwell competed in pageants as a young child, and she explains that this industry caused her to suffer from stress, anxiety, and body image issues as she was raised in the industry that requires females to be unrealistic. Lieberman also states the minor claim of explain that NC House of Representatives…

    • 323 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The wins of Jennifer Hawkins and Laurin Eagle in beauty contests have sparked a debate over the harmlessness of the beauty pageants in Australia, as in the past few decades, Australian women are inspired by role models of dignity and respect not by body images, but pageant victors' thin bodies now urge young women to lose weight than usual and also lead to mental health…

    • 66 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The effects that competing in pageantry can have on women in today’s society have become recently a major looked into problem within the past 25 years. By looking at the effects of pageantry on young children, young adults, and adult women of America, it is obvious the difference of pageantry between young children and adult women. This is important because the effects that pageantry has on young children is highly negative, while the effect of beauty contests in adult women is highly positive.…

    • 325 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the article, What Are We Teaching Our Girls, Martha Cartwright starts by describing the history of beauty pageants. She states that the first pageants were not only about judging contestants on their outward appearance. The pageants also judged contestants on how respectable they were as a person. She says that beauty pageant winners once were viewed as positive role models for younger girls. They were models to show young girls what a well-rounded woman should be like. These role models were used to show girls that being beautiful on the outside is not everything…

    • 1134 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Oppisition Arguments

    • 305 Words
    • 1 Page

    Beauty pageants are one of the worst places for young girls to increase self-esteem. You’re in a competition were all the contestants are trying to be the most beautiful of them all and will try to put you down to…

    • 305 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Toddlers And Tiaras

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Beauty Pageants can lead to disorders later in life, and learning demanding values. One disorder that beauty pageant causes a psychological problem such as depression and stress. Putting pressure on a child telling them that they have to win and when that does not turn out to be true the kid falls into depression. That’s where the crying and screaming happens. It’s hard being confident knowing you’re going to win, but you loss as a kid it breaks your heart because beauty pageant is all about competition.…

    • 469 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Annotated Bibliography

    • 482 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Beauty pageants made their first appearances in America during the 1920’s, where women flaunted around casinos, determined to win a crown for their physical attractiveness. The owner of the casino where these activities occurred, figured that this would attract more tourists. Throughout the years, more modern pageants were formed, like Ms. USA and Ms. America. Following in the footsteps of its adult form, child beauty pageants merged into the 1960’s. Child beauty pageants usually consist of modeling sportswear, evening wear, and showing off any special talent they may have. Judges critique the girls individually, based on their physical looks, poise, confidence, and perfection. To the judges, this is called “the complete package.” Although the objective of most child pageants is to build confidence and self-worth, beauty pageants can be considered exploitive to minors by causing them to believe in unrealistic ideas about beauty.…

    • 482 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Beauty pageants often provide psychological problems that can develop as a condition later on in life, and contestants will grow up in a…

    • 1843 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Beauty

    • 1147 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Child Beauty Pageants: What Are We Teaching Our Girls?The princess syndrome, self-image and eating disorders…

    • 1147 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Imagine, being a little girl all done up like a Barbie doll, with a fake tan and fake nails. Imagine, being a little girl and not being able to nap after being awake for hours on end, for fear of disheveling your appearance. Imagine, being a little girl dressed up in a too-tight dress and high heels, prancing around on a stage for hundreds of people, being judged based on your looks. Imagine, being a little girl, standing with all of your opponents, and hearing the judges call the name of another little girl who won first place, watching all that you’ve worked for be placed in the perfectly manicured hands of someone else. Would you ever want to be put through this? Well, girls who are in beauty pageants deal with this and so much more every…

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Stereotypes In Pageants

    • 2146 Words
    • 9 Pages

    A girl should not be judged on her looks. When you teach kids that beauty is only on the outside it can cause major problems, not only health problems but social and physical and mental problems also. If a beautiful girl enters a pageant and doesn't win she will start to consider herself ugly or fat or too skinny. Many beauty pageant girls end up being anorexic because they think they need to like a Barbie doll during the pageant. Many girls perceive that they are not skinny enough because they have been told that they need to eat right and stay at a certain weight if they want to win the pageants.…

    • 2146 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Societal influences have the potential to negatively impact one’s body image, particularly through participation in a Child Beauty Pageant. This “extracurricular activity” introduces unrealistic ideal images to children at such a young age; children, particularly females, are impacted psychologically and physically from this controversial practice, as well as from the undesirable parenting behind it. Society as a whole is also impacted by the airing of sexualized shows such as Toddlers and Tiaras. The early introduction and exposure to a sexist and sexualized competition will ultimately damage that child’s mental health in the future. This will result in a prolonged, destructive sense of self leading into adulthood. In Henry A. Giroux’s article,…

    • 825 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Stereotypes In Pageants

    • 847 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Scientific research based on future outcomes of child beauty pageants in the novel “Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry”, Psychologists Sigmund Freud's Psychoanalysis theory says ‘Beauty pageants lead to the desire of being perfect”. Psychologist Phil McGraw told pageant mothers that they need to explain their children that pageants are not realities but fantasies. Possible emotional problems and negative psychological effects are a huge factor and are going to drastically affect the contestants future. Forty percent of children that participated in the beauty pageants have problems psychologically and the other sixty percent of children are unhappy during the pageant itself. Women who have competed in beauty pageants in the past were more unhappy with their bodies unlike women who had not participated. A person's development is determined by the events that have occurred in their early childhood. Because of the strong desire to be perfect some resort to extremes to gain that approval. Perfectionism for example, spray tanning, hair extensions, and sometimes starving…

    • 847 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beauty pageant industry being skinny or thin is a must. Many women go above and beyond to meet this criteria. Some women even resort to starving themselves. “In recent studies, researchers have indicated that there is a trend among women who have participated in the pageant circuit regarding eating disorders” (Beauty). The focus on outward appearance has gone too far. eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia are often caused by these pageants. Kristen Haglund, Miss America 2008 is living proof that eating disorders come about in the pageant lifestyle. She was one of the many pageant contestants who has struggled with an eating disorder. “Although today Kristen…

    • 575 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Beauty Contest

    • 682 Words
    • 3 Pages

    “Mom am I beautiful” says 4 yr old Jane “well of course sweetheart, why would you ask such?” Well mom I don’t look like the girl who was crowned the prettiest. I can only shake my head in sadness knowing that a 4 yr old girl thought she wasn’t beautiful because of someone else’s opinion on beauty which brings me to the question “Do beauty contests really serve a purpose in today’s society?” There are many different kinds of beauty contests. They are for both men and women and range from infants to adults in age. It’s putting in young girls and women minds that they have to reach the description of beauty from society. It is all about what is inside and the person that they are that makes them beautiful. What the media and shows such as beauty contests have done is make everyone think that if they are not super skinny, tan, tall, and have just the right features, then they are not pretty. Who is to say what is beautiful and what is not? Who has that right? Everyone has their own opinion on what is beautiful. Beauty is what we make it out to be.…

    • 682 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays