Policy Press

The Harms of Beauty

By Sam Barnes

This groundbreaking ethnographic study lifts the lid on the dark side of beauty – revealing why young people are willing to inflict self-harm in the pursuit of ‘perfection’ and exploring the motivations for using, buying and selling counterfeit beauty products and services.

The beauty industry thrives on creating a sense of dissatisfaction with appearance, with social media adding pressure to conform to idealised images of beauty. This has led to a growing use of products for bodily improvement such as facial injectables and weight loss drugs, which have arguably become increasingly normalised throughout society.

This groundbreaking ethnographic study lifts the lid on the dark side of beauty – revealing why young people are willing to inflict self-harm in the pursuit of ‘perfection’ and exploring the motivations for using, buying and selling counterfeit beauty products and services.

Sam Barnes is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Arden University.

1.Introduction

2.Ultra-Realism, Subjectivity, Motivation

3.The Changing Nature of Beauty, Enhancement and Harm

4.The Contemporary Seller and the Myth of the ‘Organised Criminal’

5.Consuming (Counterfeit) Beauty, Consuming Aesthetic Pleasure

6.From Filters to Fillers: The Real-Life Instagram Face

7.Botox, Booze and ‘Bonding’

8.Conclusion