“Beauty has no price, for a beautiful woman has the world at her feet”: representations of the female body in advertisements printed in “Realitatea Ilustrată” magazine

Vlad Mihăilă
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Abstract

Printed interwar advertisements articulated a discourse that served both to promote specific meanings attached to femininity – physical beauty as a central social and symbolic female quality – and to define precise social sanctions that could be applied to women that did not know or follow normative beauty standards. Distinguishing constantly between what was desirable and what was repulsive, between the ideal and the imperfect, ad makers employed a series of visual and textual representations of the female body as a means to create a polarized and reductionist discourse, which in turn aimed to reduce the number and validity of definitions attached to femininity. The resulting symbolic antithesis stated that a beautiful woman was a model of social, economic and personal success, in stark opposition to the woman that did not value her physical appearance, doomed to live an unhappy and meaningless life, bereft of familial or professional fulfillment. This article will argue that representations of the female body created by the interwar advertising discourse played an important role in the structuring and dissemination of specific gender roles, expectations and stereotypes associated with femininity. The study is centered on qualitative analysis of a selection of ads printed between 1927 and 1940 in a well-known Romanian popular magazine – “Realitatea Ilustrată”.Printed interwar advertisements articulated a discourse that served both to promote specific meanings attached to femininity – physical beauty as a central social and symbolic female quality – and to define precise social sanctions that could be applied to women that did not know or follow normative beauty standards. Distinguishing constantly between what was desirable and what was repulsive, between the ideal and the imperfect, ad makers employed a series of visual and textual representations of the female body as a means to create a polarized and reductionist discourse, which in turn aimed to reduce the number and validity of definitions attached to femininity. The resulting symbolic antithesis stated that a beautiful woman was a model of social, economic and personal success, in stark opposition to the woman that did not value her physical appearance, doomed to live an unhappy and meaningless life, bereft of familial or professional fulfillment. This article will argue that representations of the female body created by the interwar advertising discourse played an important role in the structuring and dissemination of specific gender roles, expectations and stereotypes associated with femininity. The study is centered on qualitative analysis of a selection of ads printed between 1927 and 1940 in a well-known Romanian popular magazine – “Realitatea Ilustrată”.
“美丽是无价的,因为美丽的女人拥有全世界”:刊登在《现实画报》(Realitatea illustrated)杂志上的女性身体广告
两次世界大战之间的印刷广告清晰地表达了一种话语,它既促进了女性气质的特定含义——身体美是社会和象征性的女性品质——又定义了精确的社会制裁,可以适用于不知道或不遵循规范美的女性标准。广告制作者不断区分什么是令人满意的,什么是令人反感的,理想的和不完美的,他们使用了一系列女性身体的视觉和文本表现,作为创造两极分化和简化主义话语的手段,这反过来旨在减少与女性气质相关的定义的数量和有效性。由此产生的象征性对立表明,美丽的女人是社会、经济和个人成功的典范,与不重视外表的女人形成鲜明对比,她们注定要过着不快乐、毫无意义的生活,失去了家庭或职业上的成就。本文将论证两次世界大战之间的广告话语所创造的女性身体表征在构建和传播特定的性别角色、与女性气质相关的期望和刻板印象方面发挥了重要作用。这项研究的重点是对1927年至1940年间刊登在罗马尼亚著名流行杂志《现实画报》上的精选广告进行定性分析。两次世界大战之间的印刷广告清晰地表达了一种话语,它既促进了女性气质的特定含义——身体美是社会和象征性的女性品质——又定义了精确的社会制裁,可以适用于不知道或不遵循规范美的女性标准。广告制作者不断区分什么是令人满意的,什么是令人反感的,理想的和不完美的,他们使用了一系列女性身体的视觉和文本表现,作为创造两极分化和简化主义话语的手段,这反过来旨在减少与女性气质相关的定义的数量和有效性。由此产生的象征性对立表明,美丽的女人是社会、经济和个人成功的典范,与不重视外表的女人形成鲜明对比,她们注定要过着不快乐、毫无意义的生活,失去了家庭或职业上的成就。本文将论证两次世界大战之间的广告话语所创造的女性身体表征在构建和传播特定的性别角色、与女性气质相关的期望和刻板印象方面发挥了重要作用。这项研究的重点是对1927年至1940年间刊登在罗马尼亚著名流行杂志《现实画报》上的精选广告进行定性分析。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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