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    Effect Of Fashion Industry On Development Of Adolescent Self-Esteem

    Number of Pages: 9

     

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    9 pages in length. The writer discusses how since the beginning of man's timeline, the issue of beauty has been one to dictate many social concerns. From the caveman era to ancient Greece to modern day society, physical beauty has endured constant change to its perception; however, one thing that has not changed is the power inherently associated with its presence and the unrelenting pressure to attain such status, particularly upon the impressionable adolescent population. Bibliography lists 10 sources. TLCfashn.rtf

    Name of Research Paper File: LM1_TLCfashn.rtf

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    caveman era to ancient Greece to modern day society, physical beauty has endured constant change to its perception; however, one thing that has not changed is the power inherently associated  with its presence and the unrelenting pressure to attain such status, particularly upon the impressionable adolescent population. Contemporary society equates physical beauty with  power, even when that power is not warranted. Nowhere is this more apparent than in todays popular culture where societal dictates are readily implemented and thrust upon a vulnerable  female population. From childhood on, women are given a distinct impression of what beauty is and does within the context of social power, with children taught in no uncertain  terms that those who possess physical beauty will reap many benefits throughout life. "Childhood is a very impressionable period, and what children hear or read during this critical period  can determine the value system which dominates their entire lives" (Hongsook, 1997, pp. 120-138). Kamy Cunninghams article entitled Barbie Doll Culture and the  American Waistland illustrates how the fashion industry places undo pressure upon impressionable adolescents. That each generation carries the burden of representing a certain physical appearance is quite easy to  trace over the past one hundred years; however, one might readily argue the fact that never has this pressure been so great as it has been during the Barbie doll  generation. Cunningham (1997) points out how the image of power and gender roles in contemporary popular culture reflects significant patriarchal control, with the manipulation of the female gender a  pertinent component of its objective. "Body dissatisfaction or low body esteem has been reported to predict disordered eating among young women in the United States and other western countries. 

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