2019
DOI: 10.1017/asr.2018.125
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Beauty and the Bikini: Embodied Respectability in Nigerian Beauty Pageants

Abstract: Abstract:In the world of Nigerian beauty pageants, the bikini remains a fraught embodied symbol and aesthetic practice. Pageant affiliates, critics, and fans alike strongly debate the question of whether to include bikinis in these events. This article draws primarily from nearly a year of ethnographic observations of two Nigerian national beauty contests in 2009-2010 to show how various stakeholders used personal, domestic, and international frames about women’s bodies, and the bikini in particular, to bolste… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The capitalist perspective of modern-day beauty pageants intersect with the post-feminist standpoint where women are seen as powerful citizens and consumers who have control over their physical body through materialistic consumption and cosmetic surgeries [9]. This intersection is called 'consumptive femininity' in which products such as beauty products, apparels, and clothing mark idealized gendered norms that are classbound through purchasing power [4].…”
Section: Capitalism and Consumerismmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The capitalist perspective of modern-day beauty pageants intersect with the post-feminist standpoint where women are seen as powerful citizens and consumers who have control over their physical body through materialistic consumption and cosmetic surgeries [9]. This intersection is called 'consumptive femininity' in which products such as beauty products, apparels, and clothing mark idealized gendered norms that are classbound through purchasing power [4].…”
Section: Capitalism and Consumerismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ironically, being a beauty queen does not entail political power, but rather acquires a symbolic capital. [4,6]. The process of upward mobility, however, can necessitate doings that may seem risky, illicit, or even immoral from the eyes of society, but may be considerably meaningful to the aspiring beauty queen.…”
Section: Classism and Class Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Beauty pageants in Nigeria take place on highly public national and global stages, as contestants compete in top pageants around the world. Contestants’ bodies signal complex shifting aesthetics that position African beauty as fashion-forward to promote a global-African ideal, which propels and integrates Nigeria into international arenas of diplomacy and trade (Balogun, forthcoming). High-end sex workers in Vietnam, in contrast, work on a stage that is hidden from the general public, yet open for a select group of Vietnam’s political and economic elites.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%