Welcome! We're glad you found us. This is a class blog for Women in Performance: Choreographies of Resistance (WMST/DNCE 323) at California State University San Marcos. Throughout the semester we will be focusing on a range of topics with an emphasis on movement and feminism. "[We take on] multiple perspectives of women who have resisted cultural norms to forge new and brave perspectives on the body". This blog will help the students to create an exploration of the course material in relation to real world connections and experiences. Please feel free to take a look around, post questions, or comments. We hope you enjoy our findings and learn something new in the process.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Our Bodies Ourselves

By: Yussett Navarrete
In the vagina monologues they have what they call, “vagina fact.” I was reading them and I came across the topic of genital mutilation. According to these vagina facts genital mutilation is when a girl gets her clitoris cut or removed then gets part or all of her labia sewn together.  It also says, “Genital mutilation has been inflicted on 80 to 100 million girls and young women.”  I was in total shock of the amount of girls and young women that are forced to undergo this procedure. Reading this made me think of labiaplasty. According to the book,Our bodies, ourselves labiaplasty is a surgery that some women undergo in which, their inner vaginal lips are cut and shortened to make them smaller or more symmetrical. In Our bodies, ourselves they also mention that some men are pressuring their female partners to have surgery so they more closely resemble the women in pornographic movies. This made me realize that the media has a lot to do with what we think of our body images. Every single part of our body no matter how hidden it may be can’t escape the criticism of society. According to www.ourbodiesourselves.org  “Every part of the female body is picked apart and scrutinized, with most articles telling us outright which products we should buy to fix--or at least camouflage--our numerous "flaws."” Women are pressured into looking like the supermodels in the magazines, the women in pornographic movies, and the women we see on television etc. Reality is that those women we see in the magazines or on television don’t really look like that in real life. They use photoshop to make them look skinnier with a smaller chin, no blemishes, longer legs, nicer lips, young, etc. Many are airbrushed and have had plastic surgery. In the article provided by www.Ourbodiesourselves.org they say, “Real women with pubic hair and breasts that aren’t perfect round orbs begin to seem unnatural compared to the altered images we see in the media.” This proves that we are brainwashed by the media to believe that to be beautiful you need to look like the supermodel in a magazine when in reality that supermodel doesn’t even look like that herself. Many women that are in the pornographic business have undergone labiaplasty to make themselves look more appealing and beautiful to the viewer. Then the viewer perceives this image of how a woman’s vulva “should” look like to be sexy and attractive. I believe that this is a trend that will always continue but, we need to learn to appreciate and love every part of our body just the way it is because no one is the same. We are each one of a kind.

2 comments:

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  2. It reminds me of a book I read a few years ago called “The Desert Flower” by Waris Dirie. She is from Somalia and was circumcised at the age of five. It was made with a dirty razor blade. She came to Europe at the age of thirteen because she wanted to escape from a marriage with a much older man. She found place in the international modeling because she was really beautiful. She says that circumcision was practiced on two million girls a year. I happened especially in Africa but also in immigrated communities in Europe. In the book she talks about her experience and her intimate thoughts. It’s such a cruel thing. I can’t believe people do this.
    -Annika W.

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