A Woman's Beauty

Essay by invisi3leHigh School, 11th grade November 2008

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A Woman's Beauty

In reading Susan Sontag's "A Woman's Beauty", she explains that women think they have an obligation to be beautiful and that they consider how they look more important than who they are. Sontag also adds that women are sometimes obsessed with their outer beauty that they lose sight of their inner beauty. Fashion and the Media both have taken outer beauty way too far for women. In this society today, women are more pressured by other women on how they look. Women judge other women about their looks but men don't do the same, because it is considered" unmanly" as Sontag states. Women naturally try to be appropriate and beautiful to attract men. Unfortunately, they have gone to very high levels of obsession with themselves that they lost track of their purpose of being beautiful and their position in this society. Sontag also argues that women at the same time have the idea in their minds that being beautiful will earn them a certain reputation and place in society, and that beauty brings power and success.

Even young women grow up have these same ideas in their minds and according to Sontag, "they are taught to see their bodies in parts and to evaluate each part separately". In modern days beauty is administered as a form of self-oppression. In the process of growing up, young women may forget how intelligent they are and their goals in life. According to some people who have been surveyed about women's success in the society, good looks are a great advantage in many areas of life. Let's go back to the point that women try to make themselves beautiful to attract the best men possible. Women forget that beauty is also the power to attract. In women's view, men...