Gender Stereotypes

Words: 865
Pages: 4

Looking in the mirror, the adolescent can see herself dressed in a rose cotton dress with a golden floral pattern and little white loafers. Her glowing, bronzed face has warm eyes and plump, bowlike lips curled into a smile. To any stranger, she could be a young girl who lives a serene existence. What no by passer could know is she hiding her pain. Anxiety of losing the little she has and depression from the tragedy she lives are concealed from her appearance. Her past misshaped may be unknown to the anybody, but, once she confesses her story, the teenager is perceived as an avaricious intruder that came to this country to seize from the largesse of its people. In a way, the letter B represents this view. Being two dimensional, curved and …show more content…
Hourglass figure, light skin, slim waist, and voluptuous breasts make up a flawless, female body. Magazines, billboards, broadcasts, and media in general advertise and promote these ideals. Models’ appearances are altered significantly to match such characteristics. The editing, in which some cases its extreme and unreal, is accepted widely as banal. Pressured by harsh criticism and judgement in everyday situations, the public often strive to possess these features through disdained procedures. Plastic implantations, liposuction, rhinoplasty, lip augmentations, and breast lifts are still taboo subjects even as more patients receive these treatments. A majority of patients often remain secretive of their alterations considering how the frequently society perceive surgically modified physiognomics as “fake” and “superfluous”, trying to hard to be …show more content…
He, Dorian Gray, falls for a philosophy that elevates the satisfaction of the senses as the purpose as of why one exists. The publication perfectly portraits the conflicting ideals in which anything pleasing at sight is grotesque subsequent to the revealment of its truth. Dorian is a very attractive male who partakes in an active, aristocratic life by attending the opera, theatre, and gatherings in pretentious West London. At night in the decaying east side, he enjoys himself with hedonic activities such as opium consumption. Although such debauchery is against the morality imposed by society, Gray is encouraged to do so because of his knowledge of other members of upper class leading double lives. Toward the end of the novel, Dorian experiences subtle criticism from everyone around him from the circulation of rumors from his dark lifestyle even has the gossipers mirror his