I found Associate Professor Erin Griffey and Victoria Munn’s research investigating the origins of beauty cultures and visual cultures of beauty to be fascinating. By referring to the Renaissance, the ‘Great Works’ they relied on were digitalized manuscripts and original printed texts of ‘beauty recipes’. These recipes were cross-referenced with adornments such as paintings in order to create a concrete conceptualization of how beauty ideals were founded and persued. Griffey and Munn discovered consistencies across the European cultures: that health was seen to directly correlate with beauty, and that health could be measured against outward standards of lustrous skin and the endorsement of certain herbal recipes. The relationship between the smell of certain recipes, as well as their textures, pointed to what I percieved to be a certain superstition that perpetrated beauty at that time. Their research is important in explaining how beauty standards have evolved through time, the qualities that society has clung onto, and the continuing quest for perfection in finding ‘beauty recipes’ that prove successful and can stand the test of time. Their research was also an important reminder that ideals and values that form undercurrents in society don’t just exist in a time vacuum, their explanations have historical roots, and overlooking this reality in the research process constrains the value and insight that your research can offer.
About The Author
Emma Burns
My current interests extend to how world views, carved out from differing social experiences, affect people’s lifestyles and their self-image. Identity is a concept of varying shades of complexity, and it continues to fascinate me how one’s self-image can be so starkly divergent from someone else’s perception. Mental health is something that deserves the increased recognition that it has in recent times received, but there remain many underrepresented issues that are misunderstood in the public eye. I am motivated to prevent the inevitable isolation that arises when underrepresented mental health issues contribute damaging, sometimes irreversible effects to one’s self-image and their self-assessed capacity for social integration. Partly due to my own experiences, I have always been interested in lesser-known forms of social anxiety, and how coping mechanisms employed at a young age to deal with the implications, are transformed with age. I endeavour to research and explain the motivations behind differing coping mechanisms, and to accordingly assess how effective these methods are towards the prospect of long-term social integration. How self-identity is preserved and reconciled throughout the process of growing up will be a key point of focus. I am especially interested in how coping mechanisms are shed with age, or whether, even if overcome, habits remain detrimentally ingrained to some degree or another. I hope to, with empathy and open-mindedness, generate greater awareness towards such issues and to position myself in a stance that furthers their representation in the public eye.