Michael Buerk (a BBC broadcaster and former newsreader) has
made me very cross indeed this week. He has said that television
presenters who “got a job mainly because [they] look nice”
should not 'cry ageism' and complain when they are sacked to make way for younger
replacements. Though he hasn't mentioned the gender of the presenters he's talking about, he has said that some of them have "even" gone to tribunals over the issue, so there's no doubt about it: he's talking about women.
Grey-haired father of two Buerk (68) does not seem to
realise the bind that women are in. They will not be employed as presenters or
newsreaders unless they do look
“nice”. Regardless of whether they have top degrees, speak several languages
and have considerable political, editorial and journalistic experience,
there will be plenty of people – like Buerk, presumably – who cannot see past
the issue of physical appearance. It is then doubly maddeningly infuriating
(yes, I am cross – did I mention that?) when those same people repackage their
own short-sightedness as a shortcoming of the women themselves, dismissing a highly
skilled, talented and experienced female as “just a pretty face”.
I thought of this trap – damned if you’re deemed ‘pretty’,
damned if you’re not (and either way it’s the most important thing about you!)
– when looking recently at this marvellous 16th-century woodcut of a
Venetian woman lightening her hair.
It’s from Cesare Vecellio’s Habiti Antichi et Moderni, which was published in Venice in 1590
(and is now available in a beautiful English edition, translated by Margaret F.
Rosenthal and Ann Rosalind Jones, under the title The Clothing of the Renaissance World).
The picture shows a young woman sitting in a rooftop loggia,
sunning her hair (but, crucially, not her face) with the help of a straw hat
from which the crown has been cut out. The hat has a broad brim, across which
the woman’s hair is draped. Vecellio's text tells us that women like this
“keep their heads exposed to the sun for days at a time” in order to make their
hair turn blonde:
[T]hey sit [outside]
when the sun is hottest and wet their hair with a little sponge attached to a
wooden handle and soaked in a liquid that they buy or make at home themselves; and over and over again, as they
wet their hair, they let it dry in the sun, and in this way they turn their
hair blonde so effectively that we think it is natural.
I’m not sure how Michael Buerk would feel about spending his
days like this, but I imagine it must have been a tedious and, in the heat,
quite possibly fairly uncomfortable way for a young woman to pass her time. Why
would she do it?
For a clue, let us turn to Agnolo Firenzuola’s Dialogo delle Bellezze delle Donne (Dialogue On the Beauty of Women), 1548.
“The hair… should be fine and fair,” he says, “in the similitude now of gold,
now of honey, and now of the bright and shining rays of the sun…”
A bit like this, then. I wonder how many hours in the loggia
these streaks took…
Young Woman with a Fan
c. 1555
(possibly Titian’s daughter Lavinia)
by Titian, who was Cesare Vecellio’s cousin
[Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia
Commons
|
In Vecellio’s discussion of hair-lightening, the fact that
women are trapped by society’s requirement that they must be beautiful is not
acknowledged. Vecellio, it seems, is as blind to this as Michael Buerk. His text
accompanying the woodcut instead blames women for their efforts to conform to contemporary
ideas of beauty:
[A]ll women desire to
increase their natural beauty through art, and the women of Venice are no
different in their eagerness to do this. In doing so, however, they harm more
than help themselves… [W]hen other people recognize the effort they have put
into this, they mistrust even the woman’s natural beauty and judge it as
artificial.
It’s a very neat Catch-22 situation. Hair dyeing is associated
with vanity and a lack of ‘real’ beauty. (The Roman poet Propertius wrote, “All beauty is best as nature made
it… In hell below may many an ill befall that girl who stupidly dyes her hair
with a false colour!”) ‘Real’ beauty is natural… but definitions of
female beauty are prescriptive and limited. Women cannot escape being judged on
their looks, and yet they are criticised for making efforts to conform to the
ideal.
At the bottom of this tangled prejudice lies the age-old
association of the female with matter and the body, which (despite the
idealisation of beauty) has long been considered fundamentally inferior to
spirit (associated with the male). Jacqueline Murray, in an article on
Firenzuola’s On the Beauty of Women,
explains it thus:
Philosophers since the
time of Plato associated women with the body and the material world, both
inferior to the soul and the spiritual world. Thus women are evaluated as
inferior within a framework of body-soul dualism. This is particularly
significant when analysing treatises praising women in general and acclaiming
women’s physical beauty in particular…
This anti-body prejudice is embedded deep within our
culture, and needs examining in itself every bit as urgently as the continuing
gender double standard with which it is associated. It makes the fact that
beauty is more important for women than it is for men – a fact stated
by Baldassare Castiglione in The Book of
the Courtier (1528) – doubly unfair. Because it means that not only are women judged on an arbitrary, superficial and (in most cases) irrelevant standard, but also that when they meet that standard, when they are deemed beautiful – as Michael Buerk implied (2014) – it turns out they aren't worth much after all.
Just go to Google Images and type in "newsreader". The mars vary from young ad attractive to grey-haired and balding. The females are ALL young. I came across an article that said young female performers are being persuaded to start Botox in their twenties! This is to avoid having a facelift at forty.
ReplyDeleteIt's not new, as you said. I'm very glad I don't rely on my looks for my work, but I would like to say that these days you have a better chance of selling as a writer if you're a pretty young thing who can be paraded at writers' festivals. Older writers get less exposure.
That's "males" not mars. :-)
ReplyDeleteI fully agree with your post. My husband (aged 63)whenever he sees a woman on TV - in whatever capacity - he always remarks on how old she is,(mutton dressed as lamp is a frequent statement!) what she's wearing ow whether her hair is dyed or the fact that she has too much or too little make-up on. He never comments on a man's appearance at all but whether he's intelligent or knows what he's talking about. It drives me potty but he isn't even aware he's doing it.
ReplyDeleteFor 'ow' please read 'or'.
ReplyDeleteWhat an EXCELLENT post, with such fantastic context.
ReplyDeleteI've been reading (and sharing) your blog posts for a long time, but this one is the one I must make a point of commenting on to THANK you for. Brava!! The perfect statement - and thank you for the illustrations and quotations!
Blogging, Tweeting, and shouting this one from the rooftops.
By the way, is that Jack Smith comment spam or ironic? I won't click on links in most comments, so if that one's a joke I've missed it ...
ReplyDeleteI think it was spam, and in any case it was self-promoting, so in my role as admin, I've deleted it.
ReplyDelete... and thank you for deleting my own double-post as well. My apologies for that! :)
ReplyDeleteIndeed - nothing new under the sun (though I love that sun hat). I wonder if we'll ever get to the point where the gravitas age brings will be appreciated in both genders.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Harriet. The general attitude to women newsreaders in television makes me angry too.
ReplyDelete