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AMSTERDAM, OCT 14, (Reuters): Long before suffragettes shackled
themselves to railings and Women's Libbers burned their bras, female
freedom fighters were waging a more covert war, using lipstick,
mascara and false bosoms as weapons.
Far from being instruments of
oppression in a vast male conspiracy, such "beauty devices" were used
by women to manipulate the judgmental masculine eye in an effort to
control the uncontrollable, says feminist author Teresa Riordan.
Researching a century from Victorian corsets and bustles to the
nail polish and girdles of the 1950s and Marilyn Monroe's breast
implants, Riordan has written a history of the commercial inventions
used by women to transform themselves.
"When successful, the artifice of Beauty is a great leveller. It
puts the resourceful and the imaginative on an even playing field with
the congenitally beautiful," says Riordan in her book "Inventing
Beauty", published this month.
"The scrawny can appear amply endowed. The corpulent can achieve
some semblance of a waist. The thin-lipped can look lusciously
kissable. The wizened can project a youthful bloom."
Certain traditional feminists -- largely those who came of age in
the 1960s and '70s and fought hard not to be judged on their
appearance -- may be horrified by Riordan's theory that cosmetics and
fashion actually empowered women.
But Riordan, a committed feminist herself, says women are no longer
judged on their appearance alone and it is an accepted reality that in
our western society looks are important so, if you can't choose your
battleground at least seek to control it.
"When it comes to the opposite sex, males from many species are
easily deceived. Male fireflies flirt with penlights. Male turkeys
become randy at the mere sight of a fake, female turkey head. Male
humans find feminine decoys equally beguiling.
"Women recognise this. And they have shrewdly, cannily and
knowingly deployed artifice in their ceaseless battle to captivate the
inherently roving eye of the male ... As much as it initially galled
the feminist inside me to admit this, women have been the driving
innovative force behind many of these inventions," she said.
According to her book, women received only 1 percent of all patents
in the United States from 1850 to 1950 but two-thirds of
breast-enhancement inventions were patented by women.
Riordan's book is not a study of the concept of beauty but rather
the innovations and technology related to it in an age that gave birth
to Alexander Graham Bell's telephone, Thomas Edison's light bulb and
Orville and Wilbur Right's airplane.
Riordan, who spent five years studying patents, argues that it is
too simplistic to say products like eye-lash curlers and hoop skirts
were thought up specifically to oppress women.
"It is pejorative to say we're just the victims and not the agents
to some degree in our own destiny," she said.
"Yes, there were huge constraints on women and still are. But that
doesn't mean women did not imaginatively, within those boundaries,
carve out their own realms of power."
The 44-year-old author and mother of three -- who was born and grew
up in the American Midwest where she says her Mediterranean looks were
at odds with the blonde, blue-eyed local concept of beauty -- is not
alone in her opinions.
"I am a feminist and even in 1968 I always wore my lipstick and
high-heels," Cisca Dresselhuys, editor of the Dutch feminist magazine
"Opzij", said.
Science, technology and commerce enabled all women in western
society regardless of financial status to have access to gadgets and
potions that improved their appearance.
The tightly-cinched Victorian corset, the rubber "Flapper
Flattener" of the 1920s and the voluptuousness of the push-up bra and
cone-shaped falsies of the 1940s and 50s are all ancestors of the
modern bra.
And, according to Riordan, the first false bosom was patented by
New Yorker Anne McLean in 1858 -- a pair of sharply pointed wire cones
inserted into the top half of a corset.
Wire falsies were replaced by rubber ones but fell out of favour
quickly. "They tended to distend and deflate, rendering the bust
uneven or, worse, leaving the putative breasts pointing in improbable
directions," Riordan writes.
With regards to make-up, Egyptian and Indian cultures have long
rimmed the eye in kohl.
But it was during the 1920s and 1930s that mascara gained renown
thanks largely to the transformation it had on legendary Hollywood
film star Greta Garbo, whose lashes were almost white.
Garbo's fame influenced a generation of women and by the early
1930s Maybelline mascara was available at local shops for an
affordable price under the slogan: "Something beautiful happens and it
can happen to you in the twinkling of an eye."
"But for mascara, Greta Garbo might have been just a chunky Swede
with bad teeth," Riordan says in her book.
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