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The Ways Women Age: Using and Refusing Cosmetic Intervention
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Overview
What is it like to be a woman growing older in a culture where you cannot go to the doctor, open a magazine, watch television, or surf the internet without encountering products and procedures that are designed to make you look younger? What do women have to say about their decision to embrace cosmetic anti-aging procedures? And, alternatively, how do women come to decide to grow older without them? In the United States today, women are the overwhelming consumers of cosmetic anti-aging surgeries and technologies. And while not all women undergo these procedures, their exposure to them is almost inevitable.
Set against the backdrop of commercialized medicine in the United States, Abigail T. Brooks investigates the anti-aging craze from the perspective of women themselves, examining the rapidly changing cultural attitudes, pressures, and expectations of female aging. Drawn from in-depth interviews with women in the United States who choose, and refuse, to have cosmetic anti-aging procedures, The Ways Women Age provides a fresh understanding of how today’s women feel about aging.
The women’s stories in this book are personal biographies that explore identity and body image and are reflexively shaped by beauty standards, expectations of femininity, and an increasingly normalized climate of cosmetic anti-aging intervention. The Ways Women Age offers a critical perspective on how women respond to 21st century expectations of youth and beauty.
Product Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780814724057 |
|---|---|
| Publisher: | New York University Press |
| Publication date: | 03/07/2017 |
| Edition description: | New Edition |
| Pages: | 288 |
| Product dimensions: | 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Preface xi
Introduction: Older Women in Cosmetic Culture 1
1 "I Wanted to Look Like Me Again": Aging, Identity, and Cosmetic Intervention 29
2 "I Am What I Am!": The Freedom of Growing Older "Naturally" 69
3 "Age Changes You, but Not Like Surgery": Refusing Cosmetic Intervention 96
4 "Can We Just Stop the Clock Here?": Promise and Peril in the Anti-Aging Explosion 119
5 "Why Should I Be the Ugly One?": Social Circles of Intervention 140
6 "It's Not in My World": Living as a Natural Ager 177
Conclusion: Taking the Body Back 195
Epilogue 219
Appendix A Research Methods 223
Appendix B Interview Subjects 233
Notes 239
Index 267
About the Author 279







