Of Beasts and Beauty: Gender, Race, and Identity in Colombia

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University of Texas Press, Sep 1, 2013 - Social Science - 280 pages

All societies around the world and through time value beauty highly. Tracing the evolutions of the Colombian standards of beauty since 1845, Michael Edward Stanfield explores their significance to and symbiotic relationship with violence and inequality in the country. Arguing that beauty holds not only social power but also economic and political power, he positions it as a pacific and inclusive influence in a country “ripped apart by violence, private armies, seizures of land, and abuse of governmental authority, one hoping that female beauty could save it from the ravages of the male beast.” One specific means of obscuring those harsh realities is the beauty pageant, of which Colombia has over 300 per year. Stanfield investigates the ways in which these pageants reveal the effects of European modernity and notions of ethnicity on Colombian women, and how beauty for Colombians has become an external representation of order and morality that can counter the pathological effects of violence, inequality, and exclusion in their country.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Setting
13
2 La mujer reina pero no gobierna 18451885
31
3 Bicycle Race 18851914
61
4 Apparent Modernity 19141929
73
5 Liberal Beauty 19301948
90
6 Exclusive Beasts 19481958
106
7 From Miss Universe to the AntiReina 19581968
128
8 Static Government Social Evolution 19681979
157
9 Pulchritude the Palacio and Power 19791985
180
Conclusion and Epilogue to 2011
211
Notes
235
Selected Bibliography
261
Index
271
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About the author (2013)

Michael Edward Stanfield is Professor of History at the University of San Francisco and author of two other books, including Red Rubber, Bleeding Trees: Violence, Slavery, and Empire in Northwest Amazonia, 1850–1933.

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