South Korean women begin to resist intense beauty pressure


South Korean women begin to resist intense beauty pressure

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South Korean women begin to resist intense beauty pressure

As she pursued her dream of becoming a fashion model, veering for years between extreme dieting and overeating, Park I Seul realized she had a problem: She was not tall and skinny, like typical runway models, nor was she big enough to be a plus-size model.To get more news about 在线人成免费视频69国产, you can visit our official website.

She also realized that the only way to meet South Korea's lofty beauty standards was for her to continuously deny who she truly is.

So Park, 25, began calling herself a "natural size model"--a nearly unheard of term in South Korea--which she defines as someone with the same kind of body you see in daily life, as opposed to a difficult-to-attain ideal. She began to get work, and she started a popular YouTube channel where she introduces fashions for women who look more like her than like the women in fashion magazines.

Her newfound positive view of her body makes her part of a growing movement by South Korean women to resist what they see as extreme pressure to look a certain way.

Hundreds of young women have taken to social media with the hashtag "talcorset," or take off the corset, to encourage others to free themselves from social stereotypes about their appearance that they feel have long bound them.

Park recently held what she called a "nondiscriminatory" fashion show in Seoul, where models varied in height and weight confidently strode across the stage. Other women have posted online photos or video clips showing themselves cutting their hair short, destroying their beauty products and going to school or work without makeup.

In South Korea, a woman weighing over 50 kilograms is considered by many to be chubby, regardless of how tall she is.

Park herself is 165 centimeters tall and weighs 62 kg, which she says puts her far from the minimum 170 cm and 40 to 48 kg weight that conventional fashion models have; she's also nowhere near the XL and above sizes demanded for plus-size models.

"I used to think that my fat body wasn't the real me and that living in such a body wasn't my real life. I kept denying myself. I believed that my life would only become happy after I lost weight," Park said. "I've come to think that I look good enough just the way I am."

South Korea is a deeply conservative country, and experts say its patriarchal society encourages rampant sexism. It had the largest gender pay gap among developed countries in 2017, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and ranks 115th out of 149 nations in the World Economic Forum's global index of overall gender parity in 2018, among the lowest-ranking Group of 20 countries.

 

According to a 2018 survey by Saramin, a leading South Korean recruitment website, 57 percent of human resources managers at South Korean companies agreed that job applicants' appearances influenced their evaluations. The survey also showed that female applicants are more affected by their looks on their job evaluations than male applicants.

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