Child Beauty Pageants
Children's beauty pageants have gotten a great deal of negative publicity in recent years, partially because of the sensationalistic coverage in the media via shows like Toddlers and Tiaras. The program depicts the vicious, back-biting, behind-the-scenes drama of competition in which young children dress up as much older, highly sexualized women often because they are pushed to do so by overly driven stage mothers. However, criticisms of beauty pageants for both children and adults stretch far back in history and are much older than reality television. What is particularly noteworthy today is the extent to which pageants have become a metaphor for the over-sexualization of children, particularly young girls. The message conveyed by the pageants seems very different from the empowering message embraced by other aspects of the media regarding the ability of girls to demonstrate their worth outside of the context of sexuality and domesticity.
To understand the complex attitudes towards pageants in America requires an understanding of their role in larger American history. Beauty pageants have an old and storied history in America. Although the attempt to discern who is the "fairest of them all" is even older than the United States, the history of the modern beauty pageant is said to have begun in the 19th century with Phineas T. Barnum. "Some of Barnum's most popular attractions were 'national contests' where dogs, chickens, flowers, and even children were displayed and judged for paying audiences. While 61,000 people swarmed to his baby show in 1855, a similar event the year before to select and exhibit 'the handsomest ladies' in America proved a disappointment" given that women were initially unwilling to display themselves in such an unrespectable manner ("People and events"). However, the rise of the flapper, shorter skirts, and more permissive attitudes gave rise to new interest in the beauty pageant. In 1921, Atlantic City held the first Miss America Pageant. "Stressing that the contestants were both youthful and wholesome, the Miss America Pageant brought together issues of democracy and class, art and commerce, gender and sex -- and started a tradition that would grow throughout the century to come" ("People and events").
The Miss America pageant and other pageants soon became profoundly symbolic of America's attitudes towards femininity and womanhood. To add respectability to the pageant, a talent competition was added in addition to the swimsuit and formalwear portions. A scholarship was also given as part of the prize, to show that talent as well as embodying wholesome American girlhood was valued. The crowing of the first Jewish, African-American, and differently-abled Miss Americas all became headline news as evidence of America's more diverse standards of beauty. "It has been about a dream of being beautiful. It's also been about a dream of being successful" ("Transcript"). Miss America and beauty pageants in general have sometimes been seen as symbolic of deeper cultural issues that were being worked out through the discourse of beauty.
However, beauty pageants became controversial with the rise of the feminist movement. "400 women showed up to protest the 1968 Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, N.J." And participate in "the mass dumping of aprons, dust mops, cosmetics and bras into a Freedom Trash Can, an act that reportedly inspired the urban legend that feminists in the '60s liked to burn bras for recreational sport" ("The feminists vs. The contestants"). Feminists saw the pageants as objectifying women, not as celebrating female talent and beauty.
The use of children in entertainment has been almost as controversial as judging adult women in beauty pageants. As early as Shirley Temple, it was not uncommon to see small children made up as adults for comic effect, often in a highly sexualized fashion. Before Temple became a star in her own right she starred in a series called Baby Burlesques, which depicted small children dressed up like sexy adult stars like Mae West and Marlene Dietrich (Pruitt). The British novelist Graham Greene controversially alleged that Temple's appeal was not-so-subtly sexual. "Some of [Temple's] popularity seems to rest on a coquetry quite as mature as Miss Colbert's and on an oddly precocious body as voluptuous in grey flannel trousers as Miss Dietrich's" (Anderson). These same concerns about the sexuality of young children have arisen in critiques of beauty pageants. The little girls are not simply dancing or singing or even wearing age-appropriate beautiful clothing; rather they are asked to mimic the appearance and behavior of adults long before they have awareness of and the ability to consent to what their behavior communicates.
Baby contests began to arise in America...
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 16(4): 99-114. Barrett, David & Melrose, Margaret (2012). Courting Controversy -- Children Sexually Abused Through Prostitution -- Are They Everybody's Distant Relatives but Nobody's Children? Child and Family Law Quarterly, 15(4): 371-382. McCabe, Kimberly (2007). The Role of Internet Service Providers in Cases of Child Pornography and Child Prostitution. Social Science Computer Review, 26(2): 247-251. Streetlight USA (2012). The Issue. Accessed 18 July 2012 at http://streetlightusa.org/the-issue/ U.S. Department
Children's Beauty Pageants: A phenomenon in need of greater regulation Given the tabloid attention given to children's beauty pageants, the question of whether children should be allowed to participate in these venues has been given increased scrutiny. Proponents of pageants state that they boost participants' self-esteem or at worst do no harm. However, it is the contention of this essay that far from being harmless talent competitions, the pageants raise real questions
Children's Beauty Pageants A girl, heavily made up, smiles at the camera. She is wearing a low-cut gown, false eyelashes, and high heels. She is three years old. In most other contexts, we would find this shockingly inappropriate. Yet the girl's mother is waving, smiling, and egging the child on. And worse yet, others are judging the child based upon her ability to convincingly mimic adult sexuality. The girl may have
Beauty Pageants are meant to show the world how poised and well-articulated a young girl is. However, it can also show the world what society thinks a girl should be, beautiful and well-behaved. Girls need to understand that the world is not simply what judges expect in a pageant show. As much as pageant shows want to highlight the talents of young girls, in reality, beauty pageants value beauty and
Beauty Pageants Should Be Banned Child Beauty Pageant Practices (Busting, 2011) Overview of the Pageant Beauty pageants started it the 1920s when the owner of an Atlantic City hotel came up with the idea as an attraction to boost tourism revenues. The idea caught on in a handful of cities that would hold versions of a "Most Beautiful Child" contests across the country. Over the years this industry expanded in 1964 to include
The genders mentioned here are not entirely rigid, but it is far more common to see mothers exhibiting such behavior in these arenas. The same basic principles apply, however, where the parent uses derogatory or abusive language to drive children past what are perceived as their shortcomings. Pushing children to succeed is not abuse, but when it is done in a way that is unnecessarily cruel, it's psychological abuse. Not
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