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http://www.spark-online.com
by k. m. maurice |
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I've shopped for years with great satisfaction at my favorite stores. It's not uncommon for me to grab a pair of pants in my size from the shelf, the same size I've been wearing for five years. I don't need to try it on because I know it will fit. A size 10 is a size 10. But for some reason, when I try them on at home, they don't fit; they're too small. That can't be right. I check the tag again it says size 10. I
compare my older pair of pants to the new ones; the material doesn't stretch,
so the only difference should be the color. But there is a distinct difference;
the new pants look, in comparison, about a size 8 - but they say 10. It
must be mislabeled, but why would they label a size 8 a size 10? "Clothing stores cater toward teens, for the super thin and NOT the average woman. They don't allow for people with thighs..." says Erin, a third year nursing student at Trinity Western University in Langley, British Columbia. When I asked a staff member at Esprit to explain the tiny shirt and pant sizes she simply said, "These are Hong Kong sizes." She would not elaborate on why the store would choose to use Hong Kong sizing in Canada. While I acknowledge the large population of Asian women, the fact remains the majority of North American women are hard-pressed to fit into Hong Kong sizes. The Gap, while not admitting to a Hong Kong sizing scheme, has downsized tremendously. "Size 8 at the Gap is smaller than it was five years ago," says Stephanie, an aspiring film producer. "This sort of thing makes me furious, angry. I don't want to spend my money in the store because nothing will look good on me." So where did size discrimination begin? Erin blames the media: "If you didn't see it on TV, you wouldn't walk around comparing people to these crazy unattainable ideals." Women have a natural inclination to worry about body weight and how they look, but it has become a dangerous cultural obsession. Some supermodels and superstars starve themselves to reach an ideal size and shape. "The media inspires this hideous ideal. Skin-and-bones women can't
be healthy," says Stephanie. Many overweight people in Canada and
the United States, however, feel that "this urge to lose weight should
be about health, not to look better...sometimes women look worse, in fact."
Yes, worse in fact. Sunken cheeks and protruding collarbones, ribs and
hipbones are not attractive to most, and yet they are made out as beautiful
features. While not all motion pictures are made solely for the purpose of market
value, every Hollywood film plays a role in advertising a product, a style,
a look, and a message. Unfortunately a pretty face far too often downplays
the good messages. The movie, Coyote Ugly, for example, has a strong message:
Shoot for your dreams. Don't let anyone stand in your way. You are special
and unique. The problem is that most people who saw that film saw little
more than beautiful women dancing scantily clad on a bar. Will addressing the size issue change anything? Will things change when
people continue to starve themselves to fit that size 2, 4, even 8? Change
can only come from the source, from the fashion industry. Perhaps change
will come only when models refuse to be hired based on their measurements,
or when Hollywood promotes skill over a pretty face. This is not a perfect
world, but the least we can do is try. Copyright © 2002 Kimberley Maurice. All Rights Reserved. Kimberley Maurice is from British Columbia, Canada and is working toward a B.A. in Communications at Trinity Western University. Aside from writing articles, Kim is currently creating the master script for "A Maze of Grace" 2002, with ATP Productions. After graduation she will begin her application into the Director's Guild of Canada.
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