The Moralization of Beauty: A Flawed Ideal
<p>If you’re as chronically online and addicted to social media as I am, you’re probably familiar with these types of content. Where users across platforms, particularly on Twitter are <strong>associating celebrities’ moral virtues (or being “unproblematic” as Gen Z are calling it) with their looks and how they adhere to the social convention of beauty standards.</strong> Some of the key terms usually mentioned in these tweets are ‘clear skin’, ‘no-acne’, ‘high cheekbones’ or other beauty parameters our modern society has deemed acceptable to be defined as “beautiful”. <strong>Which in my opinion, are very narrow and exclusive. </strong>This trend ignores the fact that these celebrities have the privilege and access to the best specialists and clinical treatments to “maintain” their looks, while “normal” people do not.</p>
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