Sexualization in child beauty pageants
A child beauty pageant is a beauty contest where contestants are usually under 16 years of age. There does not appear to be reliable statistics about the number of these pageants held each year around the world. They vary in style, and categories may include a talent segment as well as costume and theme wear. Contestants often wear makeup, fake teeth, false eyelashes, lipstick, elaborate hairstyles with hair extensions, and specially designed, sometimes provocative, outfits. Spray tanning and waxing are also common.[1][2] Contestants compete for prizes and are judged on the way they look and how they act on stage, similar to the judgment criteria in adult beauty pageants. Many parents attribute confidence-building as one of the reasons they enter their children in beauty pageants, but critics argue that the negative effects of beauty pageantry, especially the sexualization of young children, outweigh the positive intentions.
Background
There are several components to sexualization that set it apart from healthy sexuality. Sexualization occurs when a person's value comes only from his or her sexual appeal or behavior, to the exclusion of other characteristics.[3] A report by the American Psychological Association more specifically cites sexuality that is imposed on someone, rather than undertaken by choice, as evidence of sexualization.[4] In the United States, legal adulthood and ability to give consent varies from 16 to 18 years of age,[5] yet in child beauty pageants, the children's consenting parents permit them to participate, pay their entry fees, dress them, and train them to perform on stage in front of judges and an audience.
In preparation for these beauty pageants, children have their appearances altered by costumes, makeup, and other products to the point that they resemble dolls, which objectifies them at a very young age.[6] The child perceives that sexuality is not only encouraged but can be a means to an end.[7] The child pageant industry involves thousands of contestants and $5 billion a year in revenue,[8] and television networks air in-demand shows like Toddlers & Tiaras and Little Miss Perfect. The viewership implies that many adults not only condone these activities but also view children as sexual objects.[7]
Bikini contests of minors
Miss Tanguita, which translates as "Miss Little Thong", is held in Barbosa, Santander, Colombia as an annual part of the "del Rio Suarez" Festival. Activists say that the competition, though legal, abuses the human rights of minors.[9]
Beginning in 2016, the Miss Teen USA pageant removed the swimsuit competition and replaced it with an athleticwear round.[10]
Training for beauty pageants
USA coaches and training
The United States contains a wide variety of training opportunities for beauty contestants. There are schools across the U.S. similar to The Millie Lewis School, which offers training classes for children, teens, and adults. The Millie Lewis School helps young women overcome anxiety and build confidence through classes. The school's courses focus on personal development and help students build self-esteem through coaching in wardrobe, hair care, makeup, social grace, and more.[11]
Shelly's Pageant Express is a company that specializes in helping children find success in beauty pageants. Shelly's modeling classes help children build self-confidence through classes that focus on the specifics, such as balance, eye contact, and appropriate attire. Shelly's Pageant Express trains children as young as two years of age, the skills needed to compete in a beauty pageant.[12]
Schools for child beauty queens in Venezuela
Venezuela is the world's powerhouse for beauty pageants. In the suburbs of Caracas lies Gisselle's beauty school. Females ages four to 24 attend courses that teach everything from the perfect catwalk, to the proper way to hold a wine glass.[13] There are 160 females who take courses at Gisselle's, the majority of the females are between ages four and 11. These academies give students self-esteem, teaching them how to talk like an adult, and how to have personality.[14]
Herman's beauty academy is another school that teaches young females the critical understandings and skills of being a beauty queen. Herman's glamour school and others like it have been around for over 45 years in Venezuela. There is a culture of beauty ingrained in Venezuela's perspectives, so little kids constantly see the beauty pageants and the winners and they want to be in it.[14]
Beauty bootcamps in the Philippines
Beauty pageants are popular for females throughout the Philippines. Philippine women enter pageants hoping to win, ultimately leading to luxury living. Contestants prepare for pageants by attending training and boot camps. Individuals competing in pageants used to go to Venezuela for training, but with the development of beauty boot camps, contestants can find high-quality training in their home country.[15] Kagandahang Flores is a popular training camp in Manila. The beauty Boot camp helps Philippine women perfect the skills needed to win Binibining Pilipinas. In the Philippines, beauty pageants are cultural things that begin with admiration of beauty; however, beauty pageants are also empowering for women and provide contestants the opportunity to escape from poverty. [16] Contestants from other countries have begun traveling to the Philippines to receive training from boot camps such as Kagandahang Flores and Aces and King. The boot camps provide tedious, strenuous classes that push girls to be the best. [16]
UK beauty pageant training courses
The United Kingdom has several child beauty pageants throughout the country, including "Baby Beautiful", "Tiny Miss", "Mini Miss", and "Miss Teen Queen."[17] Training courses throughout the UK help contestants properly prepare for pageants. Pam's Pageants Academy of Modeling and Beauty Pageants is a leading talent agency in the UK that provides training courses for children and young adults who wish to perfect their pageant skills. Pam's Pageant Training Courses include catwalk training, how to appropriately answer questions, hair and beauty tips, and healthy eating and exercising.[17] The Pageant Coaching Academy in Wales also coaches children and young adults. Pageant coaching lessons include social media makeover, appearances, wardrobe, perfect pageant girl, and charity work lessons. The Academy's goal is to teach students how to refine and improve their qualities so that they can find success in pageants.[18]
Support for participation
Despite criticism of child beauty pageants, contestants' parents continue to argue for the positive impact these competitions have on their children's personal development. Supporters often cite self-confidence and poise as attributes that children learn during the pageant process, and still more defend pageants as being similar to other athletic, music, or educational programs. Since young girls like playing dress up and enjoy participating in beauty pageants, they argue, they are positive events.[19] The Pageant Director for the Cities of America preliminary pageant system echoes these sentiments and argues that pageants are good for girls—they develop self-confidence by actively trying to be a part of something, they compete with others through a fair process, and they enjoy meeting others with similar interests.[20] Being able to communicate and network with others is an important skill that children learn at a young age when participating in beauty pageants. Through pageants, children also learn how to communicate with adults.[21]
One pageant mother insists that pageants have helped her daughter "gain poise, confidence, showmanship, discipline and grace."[22] This may be true for some contestants, as the child's attitude typically derives from the parent. When the parents embrace a positive attitude, the children will follow. In these cases, pageants can teach children how to be gracious winners and good losers. They will learn the aspects of rules and fair play. Thus, pageants teach children how to be calm, cool, and collected in front of crowds. Supporters believe participants learn tenacity when they fail and must move on, and they practice arduously trying to achieve something which proves even more valuable when they are successful.[21]
From some child contestants' perspectives, pageants are fun and a way to make new friends, and they are able to feel good about their friends winning.[19]
Criticism of sexualization in child pageants
One critic debunks these claims by questioning the age-appropriateness of these pageants and whether they achieve any positive outcomes or not. After all, playing dress-up does not result in one winner and many losers, and children may enjoy appeasing parents rather than the activity itself.[7] A writer for the New York Times criticized child beauty pageants because participants and viewers impose adulthood on children while still expecting them to radiate innocence.[23]
In 1996, footage of 6-year-old JonBenét Ramsey was broadcast on television across the U.S. of her performing onstage wearing a skimpy outfit with full makeup and hair during a child beauty pageant—viewers felt as if they were watching "child pornography."[24] With popularity of similar child beauty pageant television shows like Toddlers & Tiaras, the public are concerned that young contestants are being displayed as "sex objects on stage."[25]
Children develop a sense of sexual identity during the ages of adolescence and sexualization makes this task more difficult for youth. When parents enter their child into beauty competitions they are encouraging their children to engage in behaviors and practices that are socially associated with sexiness.[26]
As Vernon R. Wiehe, a professor in the University of Kentucky College of Social Work, states, "sexualization occurs through little girls wearing adult women's clothing in diminutive sizes, the use of makeup which often is applied by makeup consultants, spray tanning the body, the dying of hair and the use of hair extensions, and assuming provocative postures more appropriate for adult models".[7] Many views the child's appearance as obscene or inappropriate.
They are dressed in revealing clothes or evening gowns, and some children wear high heels. Children are in “Child Beauty Pageants” only because of their age. These children are judged along with the same criteria as an adult pageant woman would be judged on. As stated by Laura Pappano, in a New York Times featuring child pageants, "beauty pageants in a particular blur the lines between what is cute and what is sensual.[23] "This is not about cutest baby contests, which most people would see as harmless enough, but rather about adult-like competitions featuring kids pretending to be sexy adults".[27]
There is controversy around the Glitz Child Beauty Pageants due to contestants dramatically enhancing their appearances and provocative performances. Performances and image alterations like the ones displayed in glitz pageants encourage young contestants to believe that having glitz beauty is the only way to gain success in both their pageant and non-pageant lives.[25]
Carleton Kendrick, a family therapist out of Boston says, "At its core, [pageants are] teaching girls that the best thing [they] can do, and the most attention they can get is to view [themselves] as an assemblage of body parts. And that you will focus on drawing attention to those body parts sets them up for all manner of problems in their lives—self-esteem, eating disorders, relationships they enter into".[28]
Consequences of child sexualization
In reports of children being sexually abused research shows that the sexualization of children is a contributing factor to their abuse.[7] Also, if the child is winning constantly in a competition that is based primarily on her looks, she is more likely to develop psychological issues later on in life, such as depression, low self-esteem, and eating disorders.[29] There is also a link to lowered sexual efficacy and contraceptive use later in life.
"'Some critics contend that the child beauty pageant culture fails to acknowledge that "sexualized images of little girls may have dangerous implications in a world where 450,000 American children were reported as victims of sexual abuse in 1993."[30]
As Lucia Grosaru states, in her Everyday Psychology article, “contests promote physical beauty as the main value, complimented of course by the “special talent” and “warm hearts”. A child, especially a female that is going to pay so much attention to her looks and that knows she is being assessed for it, is very prone to develop eating disorders, such as anorexia or bulimia”.[31]
Hundreds and thousands of dollars are spent on costumes, cosmetics, and even beauty consultants. Some question what does happen to a child's self-esteem if she loses the pageant after her parents have spent so much money on it.[7]
Martina M. Cartwright, an adjunct professor of Nutritional Sciences at the University of Arizona, states in her article on child beauty pageants, “many experts agree that participation in activities that focus on physical appearance at an early age can influence teen and/or adult self-esteem, body image and self-worth. Issues with self-identity after a child "retires" from the pageant scene in her teens are not uncommon. Struggles with perfection, dieting, eating disorders and body image can take their toll in adulthood”.[32] Mothers are usually involved in their child's participation in pageants, so there's a lot of information regarding their outlook on the contests. Social worker Mark Sichel believes that many mothers "push their daughters into pageants because of their low self-esteem, or as compensation for a perceived lack of attention and admiration in their own lives". As a result of these mother's constant pushing, many of these young girls feel as if they let their mothers down by losing.[33] To pull from a fathers point of view, an internet blog, "The Father Factor", has an interesting perspective on the topic of child beauty pageants. One father writes, "the mothers of the young pageant contestants all push their girls, some young as two, to emotional and physical limits. They parade the little girls around in makeup, big hairdos, and even bathing suits...I don’t see how a beauty pageant, especially at such young ages, promotes anything other than vanity."[34] In France, after a 10-year-old girl was featured on the cover of Vogue Paris in an inappropriate outfit- not fit for a child, lawmakers banned child beauty pageants all together.[34]
References
- "16 Horrifying Child Beauty Pageant Pictures". Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- "Ugly truth about beauty pageants". August 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
- Oppliger, Patrice (2008). Girls gone skank: the sexualization of girls in American culture. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Company Inc., Publishers. pp. 1–2. ISBN 9780786435227.
- "Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls".
- "United States Age of Consent Laws By State". www.ageofconsent.net. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
- Bartlett, Myke (2008). "Sex Sells: Child Sexualization and the Media". Screen Education.
- Vernon, Wiehe. "Nothing Pretty in Child Pageants". kentucky.com. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
- Giroux, Henry A. "Child Beauty Pageants: A Scene From the "Other America"". Truthout. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- Raya Desmawanto Nainggolan (14 January 2015). "Wah, Kontes Ratu Bikini Anak-Anak Digelar di Negara Ini".
- "First Look! See What Miss Teen USA Contestants Will Wear Instead of Bikinis on Total Divas". 22 July 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2017.
- "Classes/Registration". Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- "Beauty Pageants, Shellys Pageant Express Coaching for Children". www.shellyspageantexpress.com. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- Grainger, Sarah (3 September 2012). "Inside a Venezuela beauty school". Retrieved 18 February 2019.
- Forero, Juan (15 April 2005). "A Bevy of Teeny Beauties, Minds Set on Being Queens". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
- Villano, Alexa. "Beauty pageants in the Philippines: Empowerment or objectification of women?". Rappler. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
- "In the Philippines, beauty boot camps transform girls into pageant princesses". The Myanmar Times. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
- "Pams Pageants - Courses". Pams Pageants. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
- "pageantcoach | Why Coaching?". Pageant Coaching Academy. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
- Inbar, Michael. "Parents defend Putting their kids in beauty pageants". Today Parenting. Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
- Jen. "Pageantry With Purpose". Retrieved 18 April 2012.
- "Benefits of Child Beauty Pageants". Kids Formal. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
- "Why Beauty Pageants Are Good For Girls". Shine from Yahoo. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
- De Witt, Karen (12 January 1997). "Never Too Young to Be Perfect". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
- Kibbey, A. (2000). "Trial by Media: DNA and Beauty-Pageant Evidence in the Ramsey Murder Case". New York Law School Law Review. 43 (3–4): 691–714.
- Wolfe, L. (2012). "Darling Divas or Damaged Daughters? The Dark Side of Child Beauty Pageants and an Administrative Law Solution". Tulane Law Review. 87 (2): 427–455.
- "APA Task Force Report on the Sexualization of Girls: Empowering Girls". 2007. doi:10.1037/e582772010-001. Cite journal requires
|journal=
(help) - Korn, Neer. "Nanny state ok when it comes to kids and sex". Retrieved 27 April 2012.
- Morgan, Mandy (18 November 2012). "Toddlers and Tears: The Sexualization of Young Girls". deseretnews.com. Retrieved 6 September 2013.
- APA Task Force (2010). Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. OCLC 123130352.
- Giroux, Henry (2000). "Nymphet Fantasies: Child Beauty Pageants and the Politics of Innocence". Stealing Innocence. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-1-137-10916-3_2. ISBN 0-312-23932-7.
- Grosaru, Lucia (7 September 2009). "Toddlers and Children Beauty Pageants- Risk Factors for Severe Psychological Turmoils". Psychology Corner. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
- Cartwright, Martina. "Child Beauty Pageants: What Are We Teaching Our Girls?". Psychology Today. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
- Wolfe, Lucy. "Darling Divas Or Damaged Daughters? The Dark Side Of Child Beauty Pageants And An Administrative Law Solution". Tulane Law Review. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
- Chandler, D.L. "No Child Beauty Pageants For My Daughter Please". Retrieved 23 April 2012.