Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls

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Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls. / Koops, Thula; Wilkinson, Catherine; Perry, Grace; Wilkinson, Samantha; Silverio, Sergio.

Shame 4.0: Investigating an Emotion in Digital Worlds and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. ed. / Claude-Hélène Mayer; Elisabeth Vanderheiden; Paul T.P. Wong. 1. ed. Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland AG, 2021. p. 193-212.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to book/anthologySCORING: Contribution to collected editions/anthologiesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Koops, T, Wilkinson, C, Perry, G, Wilkinson, S & Silverio, S 2021, Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls. in C-H Mayer, E Vanderheiden & PTP Wong (eds), Shame 4.0: Investigating an Emotion in Digital Worlds and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. 1 edn, Springer Nature Switzerland AG, Cham, pp. 193-212. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11

APA

Koops, T., Wilkinson, C., Perry, G., Wilkinson, S., & Silverio, S. (2021). Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls. In C-H. Mayer, E. Vanderheiden, & P. T. P. Wong (Eds.), Shame 4.0: Investigating an Emotion in Digital Worlds and the Fourth Industrial Revolution (1 ed., pp. 193-212). Springer Nature Switzerland AG. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11

Vancouver

Koops T, Wilkinson C, Perry G, Wilkinson S, Silverio S. Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls. In Mayer C-H, Vanderheiden E, Wong PTP, editors, Shame 4.0: Investigating an Emotion in Digital Worlds and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. 1 ed. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland AG. 2021. p. 193-212 https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11

Bibtex

@inbook{594e5dff112e44969a7b28c16fcbb0a6,
title = "Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls",
abstract = "Women and girls have long been confronted with unrealistic, unattainable body image norms. Additionally, the {\textquoteleft}ideal feminine{\textquoteright} body has been subject to constant change over the last centuries and decades. With the proliferation of the Internet, women and girls are continuously exposed to advice from heteronormative discourses of womanhood. Demand for cosmetic surgery has dramatically increased and is still expanding. Recently, women{\textquoteright}s and girls{\textquoteright} awareness has shifted towards how they should {\textquoteleft}improve{\textquoteright} the aesthetic appeal of their labia, {\textquoteleft}optimise{\textquoteright} their vaginas, and generally make their vulva {\textquoteleft}healthier{\textquoteright}, leading to a growing popularity of female genital cosmetic surgery. Proponents of surgical interventions (falsely) claim them as agentic methods of self-expression and promise {\textquoteleft}improvement{\textquoteright} beyond the individual{\textquoteright}s control. The marketing of these procedures is predicated on shame and has been described as aggressive. Our postmodern era brings new visions of desired body image, and a rise of Internet-based digital connections between people. This means new body image {\textquoteleft}norms{\textquoteright} are instantly circulated and changed, and body image is continuously scrutinised and shamed. Coupled with increased accessibility of Internet-based nudity and pornographic material, and prevailing associations of shame and taboo about female genitalia, consequences particularly for young women{\textquoteright}s perceptions of body image are drastic. This chapter discusses the Internet{\textquoteright}s role in the recent desire by young women and girls to seek genital cosmetic surgery..",
author = "Thula Koops and Catherine Wilkinson and Grace Perry and Samantha Wilkinson and Sergio Silverio",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "22",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-030-59526-5",
pages = "193--212",
editor = "Claude-H{\'e}l{\`e}ne Mayer and Elisabeth Vanderheiden and Wong, {Paul T.P.}",
booktitle = "Shame 4.0",
publisher = "Springer Nature Switzerland AG",
address = "Switzerland",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Making the cut: Mass media and the growing desire for genital cosmetic surgery by young women and girls

AU - Koops, Thula

AU - Wilkinson, Catherine

AU - Perry, Grace

AU - Wilkinson, Samantha

AU - Silverio, Sergio

PY - 2021/7/22

Y1 - 2021/7/22

N2 - Women and girls have long been confronted with unrealistic, unattainable body image norms. Additionally, the ‘ideal feminine’ body has been subject to constant change over the last centuries and decades. With the proliferation of the Internet, women and girls are continuously exposed to advice from heteronormative discourses of womanhood. Demand for cosmetic surgery has dramatically increased and is still expanding. Recently, women’s and girls’ awareness has shifted towards how they should ‘improve’ the aesthetic appeal of their labia, ‘optimise’ their vaginas, and generally make their vulva ‘healthier’, leading to a growing popularity of female genital cosmetic surgery. Proponents of surgical interventions (falsely) claim them as agentic methods of self-expression and promise ‘improvement’ beyond the individual’s control. The marketing of these procedures is predicated on shame and has been described as aggressive. Our postmodern era brings new visions of desired body image, and a rise of Internet-based digital connections between people. This means new body image ‘norms’ are instantly circulated and changed, and body image is continuously scrutinised and shamed. Coupled with increased accessibility of Internet-based nudity and pornographic material, and prevailing associations of shame and taboo about female genitalia, consequences particularly for young women’s perceptions of body image are drastic. This chapter discusses the Internet’s role in the recent desire by young women and girls to seek genital cosmetic surgery..

AB - Women and girls have long been confronted with unrealistic, unattainable body image norms. Additionally, the ‘ideal feminine’ body has been subject to constant change over the last centuries and decades. With the proliferation of the Internet, women and girls are continuously exposed to advice from heteronormative discourses of womanhood. Demand for cosmetic surgery has dramatically increased and is still expanding. Recently, women’s and girls’ awareness has shifted towards how they should ‘improve’ the aesthetic appeal of their labia, ‘optimise’ their vaginas, and generally make their vulva ‘healthier’, leading to a growing popularity of female genital cosmetic surgery. Proponents of surgical interventions (falsely) claim them as agentic methods of self-expression and promise ‘improvement’ beyond the individual’s control. The marketing of these procedures is predicated on shame and has been described as aggressive. Our postmodern era brings new visions of desired body image, and a rise of Internet-based digital connections between people. This means new body image ‘norms’ are instantly circulated and changed, and body image is continuously scrutinised and shamed. Coupled with increased accessibility of Internet-based nudity and pornographic material, and prevailing associations of shame and taboo about female genitalia, consequences particularly for young women’s perceptions of body image are drastic. This chapter discusses the Internet’s role in the recent desire by young women and girls to seek genital cosmetic surgery..

UR - https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2#toc

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-59527-2_11

M3 - SCORING: Contribution to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-3-030-59526-5

SP - 193

EP - 212

BT - Shame 4.0

A2 - Mayer, Claude-Hélène

A2 - Vanderheiden, Elisabeth

A2 - Wong, Paul T.P.

PB - Springer Nature Switzerland AG

CY - Cham

ER -