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Marc Andelman's avatar

A thoughtful and compelling evaluation of the modern woman's own Sisyphean task: to reckon with the clever seduction of the "Beauty Trap!" Instead of being punished by pushing a giant boulder up a hiil, she is enticed to adorn herself in fashionable though impractical high heels and strut down a slick, uneven runway for all eternity. Amidst the clamor and judgment of the modern "culture gods," is it any wonder that so many women slip and fall again and again?! As in the case of Sisyphus, there seems to be only two narrow paths of escape: redefine beauty on your own terms and continue down the runway or let go of the concept completely, humbly take a seat and enjoy the garish show from the sidelines. There are serious tradeoffs to either choice and every woman needs to decide for herself. I don't envy her options!

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Alex's avatar

I think it's also worth exploring how recent a phenomenon attraction-based (or love-based) relationships are. Historically, attractiveness did not rank very highly compared to health, family upbringing, family assets and piety. These were the characteristics upon which marriages were arranged. (I presume extramarital relationships however operated to some degree on attractiveness, but it's hard to build a beauty culture around activities done in secret).

Only since the industrial revolution has beauty become far more culturally important. I wonder why this is. Is it because it's actually beneficial to women to double down on beauty (which you disagree with)? Or is it because it's valuable for corporations, who have a more engaged consumer base to sell to? Or is it because of men, who value attractiveness more and more, and other traits, like family upbringing or piety, less and less? I suppose it's many of these reasons and more.

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