Thursday, January 4, 2018: 3:30 PM
Wilson Room A (Marriott Wardman Park)
This paper examines how the American conception of female beauty introduced new and distinct understandings of beauty and femininity to post-war Italy. In analyzing beauty product advertisements from one of the most popular women's magazines of the period, Annabella, the paper articulates the components of the American beauty ideal and illustrates how these notions broke with previous Italian ideas of beauty. Moreover, the paper also examines how this new ideal promoted democratic consumer capitalist values—freedom of choice, individualism, and affluence—which had an important political and cultural significance in Italy's Cold War struggle. In light of this struggle and the country's post-war redevelopment, the American beauty ideal sought to influence the women who read Annabella and the way in which they fashioned and identified themselves—as the Italian 'Mrs. Consumer.'
See more of: Politics, Culture, and Identity in 20th-Century Italy
See more of: Society for Italian Historical Studies
See more of: Affiliated Society Sessions
See more of: Society for Italian Historical Studies
See more of: Affiliated Society Sessions
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