Humans are social animals by nature. There is an ever-present urge to assimilate into society for personal gain or comfort regardless of a person’s place of birth. Through personal observations, in both the Western and Eastern cultures, the region an individual is raised in does not definitively matter when it concerns physical insecurities or how someone goes about remodeling themselves. Some go about change through adapting their dietary habits and fitness regimes to achieve their ideal body, but in other cases, a person’s ideal is not achievable through natural means. By that stage, if someone is willing, he or she can turn to cosmetic surgery to sate his or her desires of the perfect body. This course of action is detrimental. Plastic surgery is detrimental to the individual and subsequently to modern society with how frequently the media promotes highly specific traits to even be considered beautiful while the target audience does not naturally fit into this mold. Therefore, plastic surgery exorbitantly changes how individuals perceive social status—based on idealized features—which can directly equate to a higher standard of living; additionally, it can also alter current societal mindsets concerning the epitome of beauty (whichever features is considered more advantageous) will result in the homogenization of the standard of beauty. In an advancing world dominated by technology, the speed in which ideas are shared is astounding, but also dangerous. With more access
Before 1992 women would undergo silicon plastic surgery because that have undergone mastectomy. Perfectly healthy women also undergone silicon surgery to feel beautiful. The author argues that one don’t need to have a bigger bra size or to undergo any type of physical surgery to be successful. People undergo dangerous procedures in multiple country to be beautiful and to fit in. In china the upper-class girls clip their feet to be beautiful and to be feminine to the guys. In Africa they wrapped their head to get a cone-shaped head in order to be considered intelligent. The media has manipulated young the audience. They audience think since a lot of celebrities are doing it then its ok to do it. People persuade the Hollywood image to beautiful.
Requirements of beauty are presented in almost all figures of trending media, which bombard women with images that illustrate what is scrutinized to be recognized as the perfect body. With fashion magazines, advertisements, movies, and television shows displaying young and attractive women whose body density is extremely below that of the ordinary everyday woman in reality, women begin to get self conscious and try to change themselves. When women begin to obsess over having the body of a model, dieting and exercise are not good or fast enough for the results they want. Because of their genetic body types, several of the standards for this body image are nearly impossible for most women to attain without plastic surgery of some kind. The flawless image of a female’s body that the media portrays does not actually exist; however, women starve themselves or pay for plastic surgery,
People take extreme measures by obtaining plastic or cosmetic surgery to resemble someone they desire to be or to have the same physical appearance as them. According to CNN, an online news source, “Nicole Kidman's nose. Angelina Jolie's lips. Plastic surgeons say they get these very specific requests regularly and usually oblige.” Plastic surgeons receive specific requests from their patients because they are seeking to become a near double for a celebrity. Society changes its aspects to who is accepted because individuals are influenced by the positive feedback to the “perfect” body. For instance, seven years ago, it was Jennifer Lopez’s body that was the ideal physical appearance who many people wanted to resemble, five years ago Selena Gomez, and today it is the Kardashians. (CNN) Due to many people changing their ideas of who has the accepted image many people take drastic measures to become a doppelganger of someone who is famous or whom they idolize. Melissa Dittmann, a researcher for the American Psychological Association, claims that ”Physically attractive people often receive preferential treatment and are perceived by others as more sociable, dominant, mentally healthy and intelligent than less attractive people.” Given the perception that people who are idolized in society are given more advantages compared to an individual who is referred to as simple or a nobody many seek plastic surgeons to receive changes to their appearance to become one of those individuals with the preferential treatment. To illustrate, individuals in today's society, specifically women adhere to the idea that being gorgeous and resembling a supermodel will make them attractive. (NCBI) Many individuals may only look at the physical image instead of what they are on the inside. Television programs today make the impression to people that cosmetic surgery solves with issues that are personal, mental,
The public is becoming more accustomed to the idea of plastic surgery; and number of patients seeking plastic surgery has increased in the past decade. Each year the American society is stimulated with thousands of prototype images. This reality affects countless people with low self-steam and fills the brain of men and women with lack of confidence about their body images. Plastic surgery seems to be a comfortable resolution to this issue, but actually it’s just the beginning of a more complex matter related to body images. The public is becoming more and more accustomed to the idea of plastic surgery.
Humans are known to all mostly be social creatures, it is their nature.Various things come from being social, and one very important thing would be civilization, our society. Citizens rely on their society for various things such as relying on each other for support during hard times to keeping their community’s crime rates down. However, what if the society was to crumble and fall because the citizens weren’t strong for an unknown reason? Society is only strong if the citizens who make it up are strong. What would happen then? The community would fall apart and shatter, like a plate being dropped from a high height. The citizens of this nation rely on having a society. With that being said, shouldn’t the citizens of a community do
In today's society the picture of beauty is a rail thin super model with the body of a goddess posted on billboards all around the world. Children are brought up playing with Barbie dolls with the body measurements of would be 39, 18, 38. Because of these pictures and other figures of beauties projected all over, today teenagers are convinced to believe that to be beautiful and happy they must look like these images. According to a survey by Bliss Magazine, Four in ten teenage girls have considered plastic surgery and two thirds of the 2,000 girls quizzed, average age 14, said the pressure came from celebrities with perfect bodies and boys. (BBC news)
The media plays a vast role in what is considered to be the ideal beauty. Amongst the movies, television shows, magazines and advertisements women have a lot to live up too. The media surrounds the public with “images of beautiful, thin (although fit, sculpted and large breasted) young, abled, smiling women” (188 Women’s Voices). The media in the U.S. society is making it particularly challenging for a women to accept the way she actually looks. These images of gorgeous women set standards of beauty to the other women that are then internalized. Companies that provide ways to modify the body, whether it is something as little as make up to something as large as reconstructive surgery, are becoming multimillion dollar industries. These industries are making all their money off of women who are trying to match an image that has already been modified itself. Women will pay to be able to achieve that standard of beauty. They are doing it to get the
“Be who you are not who the world wants you to be” (Unknown). Society constantly uses the phrase “Be yourself”, however at the same time indicates beauty standards such as body type; tall, skinny, incredibly tiny waist, light skin, the list seems everlasting. Cosmetic surgery, the surgical process of changing one’s physical appearance for cosmetic reasons, has become the solution for thousand of men and women seeking to reach society’s expectations. Nearly sixteen million cosmetic surgeries, most commonly known as plastic surgery, performed in 2016 in the U.S, claiming to help patient with their self-esteem and overall improvement to their future. Changing by the aspects of others and becoming someone else should not have a place in the twenty-first century, the danger, cost and personal impact of the rigorous medical procedures seem unacceptable. Having a low self-esteem and struggling with the different social beliefs of beauty aspects have other solutions rather than plastic surgery.
People are more and more drawn into thinking that their identities and bodies are similarly plastic, flexible, liquid. Karen Donley-Hayes, who is contributor to Cosmetic Surgery Times, Dermatology Times, and the Journal of the American Medical Association, contends: "An extreme makeover culture is emerging. As procedures and techniques improve and become more affordable, cosmetic surgery has turned from luxury to a prerequisite in a society that emphasizes appearance over merit. Additionally, global economic and technological forces, promote disposability and constant upgrading; people pursue surgical enhancement to reinvent themselves and remain competitive" (Donley-Hayes, 2011).
Cosmetic Surgery has become popular over the years due to the advertisement of celebrities who embrace their surgery to refine their beauty. For example, an article by Anthony Elliot, he labels cosmetic surgery as "Drastic plastic: The rise of cosmetic surgical culture"; "Celebrity obsession: Fame, fortune and faking it"; "Want-now consumerism: Immediate transformation, instant obsolescence"; and "Making the cut: Cosmetic surgical culture in the global electronic economy"(Elliot, 52). The basis of cosmetic surgery is to enhance one 's appearance to suit the paradox established by society’s view of what beauty is. This surgery symbolizes that being true to oneself is not the way, if a person wants to survive the person has to look the part. Cosmetic surgery is harmful to the body which can cause long term damage internally, and should only be used when necessary.
Be the best you can be. Today, media has led many women in America to believe self-improvement is achieved through cosmetic surgery. Every year thousands of women go under the knife to make themselves the picture perfect American. As years go by, the amount of people getting plastic is steadily increasing. In the year 2007 there were approximately 12 million cosmetic surgeries performed in the United States alone. The number of people receiving surgery increased 59% since 2000 (Markey, Charolette, and Patrick Markey, 5). Media influences our societal values, has led to women developing negative views of their body image and swayed them to go extreme measures to transform their bodies to what they see in the media.
Cosmetic surgery is becoming trendy not just in the United States, but internationally as well. We are surrounded by media that constantly reminds the society of the ways in which we should appear. The media imprints a message that happiness and success come from beauty. Media establishes this through only showing certain body figures on celebrity television shows and magazines. Because of this self-esteem begins to plummet, and people consider cosmetic surgery in hopes to boosting their self-esteem. As the articles below indicate, cosmetic procedures are viewed differently from an array of cultures due to social contact, and determining who is a good candidate for these specific procedures. Both articles are in fact reputable sources,
Society has always valued beauty. In literature, attractiveness often symbolizes an admirable protagonist, while ugliness indicates the abominable antagonist. As children we are taught, without even realizing it, to prize beauty. People of every race and culture have gone to extremes in the name of beauty – from foot-binding in China, to dangerously constricting corsets in Victorian times, to nose jobs in 800 B.C. India. While plastic surgery has been around since ancient times, it has only recently become accepted by the masses.
Plastic surgery has been around for decade, but now it making a real impact on today society. Many experts believe that it’s the influence of the media or the influence of people around us, which portrays the idea of self-image. There are many views of where plastic surgery makes a big impact like adolescent to middle age years and the media. Self-esteem is major factor of why many women and men receive surgery, however some experts say that this procedure doesn’t boosts confidence, while others says it does provided a sense of self confidence. While there are two sides of why plastic surgery is hand and hand with self-esteem, many experts have different concepts with same ideas in mind. In Cosmetic Surgery, Body image and sexuality, it states that our culture is known as the “body-changing culture” ( Berer), and that now a days we are getting changes done everywhere especially the most private parts of our bodies. While this becoming very common there are factors in the decisions on why many people choose to undergo plastic surgery. According to Pulsus Plastic Surgery
Cosmetic surgery does not operate under the same distinct goals that regular medical practices operate under: the removal, relief, or curing of maladies. Cosmetic surgery is mainly deemed as a luxury, one that is allotted to those with the means to send money on something that is often deemed purely superficial. These surgeries do not stem from a base of medical necessities, however there is a certain level of suffering that can accompany some of the patients desire for surgery. The suffering, coming from mostly issues with self image, are directly related to social norms. These social norms are constructed by society as a whole based on what they deem as “beautiful”, “expectable”, or “desirable.” These norms are either accepted by the individual, in this cause, the individual assimilates with the norm and has internalized the norm as something in which they agree with. In comparison, the individual may reject the norm as something they do not align themselves with however, because the majority accepts the norm, he or she may experience difficulties being excepted by the majority.