150 Women Who Shake the World
They're starting revolutions, opening schools, and fostering a brave new generation. From Detroit to Kabul, these women are making their voices heard.
So there’s word that Seventeen magazine is vowing to be more “transparent” about its photo shoots after a young feminists’ organization launched an online campaign alleging that “Photoshopped, air-brushed” images in the magazine promote unrealistic ideals of beauty. The move comes on the heels of Vogue pledging not to use models who appear to have eating disorders, and Glamour saying it won’t photographically manipulate models’ body sizes.
Amid a seeming rising chagrin over the sexualization of girls in media, one might note that well before there was the ability to Photoshop images, there was the art of “retouching," and that Mathew Brady, the famous 19th-century American photographer, was among its most adroit practitioners. Republicans took Abe Lincoln to be photographed by Brady shortly before he gave his famous Cooper Union speech in New York on Feb. 27, 1860, where he detailed his views on slavery. It proved to be one of his most significant addresses, and arguably helped propel him to the White House.
Honest Abe was photographed and the picture was retouched with ink and white paint and itself rephotographed. At that point, newspapers were given the retouched image to copy and publish, as was done by Harper’s Weekly. If one inspected an unretouched profile photo of Lincoln, pre-beard, in 1860, one can discern the changes made. The “new” Abe has a smoother face with a straighter collar, a neater necktie and a shorter neck. Brady would later assert that he had adjusted Abe’s collar, but didn’t disclose that he used paint to do it, according to Mary Panzer, a New York photojournalism historian and former photo curator at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington.
It wasn’t much different with photos of Mary Todd Lincoln. The camera lied. But folks didn’t really seem to care much, at least back then, when changes involved the rich and famous. So what to do about all these millions of girls staring at those perfect images in magazines? Well, maybe we can teach them to be justly distrustful of photography in general. In the same way, we can teach our children, “Hey, it’s only a movie,” when they’re taking on-screen events too seriously, we can teach them, “Hey, it’s only a photograph.”
Honest Abe was photographed and the picture was retouched with ink and white paint and itself re-photographed.
A Mary Todd Lincoln photograph retouched by Mathew Brady. (Library of Congress)
Panzer herself grew up with what she deems the impossible standards of Seventeen as her own model, thus becoming quite alert “to fly-away hair and bra straps that show. We weren’t striving to be skinny so much as impeccable, and that’s impossible, too, or almost.” Cosmetics companies have exploited teen models for years in pursuit of selling adult makeup. Remember a young Brooke Shields hawking Revlon products? A result was that 40-year-old women would buy Revlon products with the aim of having their skin look just as pristine as it did so many years earlier, says Panzer, calling it marketing genius. It was a wake-up call only when magazines started promoting "heroin chic," using apparently drug-addicted models with their improbably lean physiques. Yes, Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor, said that a woman can't be too rich or too thin. But, please, we all realize you don’t want to resemble an anorexic near death.
Inspiring women from around the globe will convene in April for the 2013 Women in the World Summit. See who’s coming!
From invisible Iranians to dealing with an overweight body, see works from female photographers to watch.
Newsweek and The Daily Beast are excited to announce the 2013 Women in the World Summit on April 4 and 5. Get your tickets today.
DINKs, DILDOs, and other readers respond to Joel Kotkin and Harry Siegel’s Newsweek story about America's declining birthrate and share their reasons for remaining child-free.
Gail Sheehy looks at the new, strategic feminism, as PBS prepares to air the documentary ‘Makers: Women Who Make America’ tonight.
As Melanne Verveer departs, who could be Obama’s new champion for women and girls? By Katie Baker.
Diane von Furstenberg joins GMA's Robin Roberts to talk about the annual DVF Awards and reveals the courageous anchor will be honored at this year's event on April 5th.
“Fatshion” is a popular community on Tumblr, where plus-size bloggers post pictures of themselves as a way of celebrating their size. Judy McGuire reports.
The film, which will be released March 7, advocates for the education of girls around the world. Eliza Shapiro reports.
Three feminists from different generations revisit Friedan’s classic. By Jessica Bennett, Letty Cottin Pogrebin, and Alisa Solomon.
A new CDC study is just the latest news to buoy the pro-breastfeeding camp, reports Eliza Shapiro.
Ping Fu talks to Katie Baker about the online backlash to her new memoir, ‘Bend, Not Break.’
She changed the game irrevocably, and now she’s about to transform it again—by walking away. Plus, read the full transcript of her farewell speech.
Tina Brown and Angelina Jolie announce gathering strength for an education fund in her honor.
How two women’s online plea is pushing the lingerie giant to the ‘survivor bra’ market. By Nina Strochlic.
See locations of the country’s 724 clinics and distance to the closest clinic in different areas. By Michael Keller and Allison Yarrow.
When companies support women, write Melanne Verveer and Kim Azzarelli, their businesses and communities win.
Veteran Anthony Woods recalls a brave lieutenant who lost her life in Afghanistan.
After gifting his DNA via Craigslist, a Kansas man may be on the hook for $6,000 in child support. Fair?
They're starting revolutions, opening schools, and fostering a brave new generation. From Detroit to Kabul, these women are making their voices heard.
Comments