China: Why some think 'small eyes' are not beautiful

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China: Why some think 'small eyes' are not beautiful
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Why some in China think 'small eyes' are not beautiful

"Do I not deserve to be Chinese just because I have small eyes?"

But Ms Cai said that she did not know what she had done to get cyber-bullied, noting that she was "just doing my job" as a model."Have I insulted China the day I was born just because of how I look?"The ads, originally shot in 2019, were dug up by nationalist netizens amid a period of heightened sensitivity online in China over advertisements depicting Chinese people.for her "ignorance" after a picture she shot for French luxury brand Dior sparked a backlash.

A recent editorial by state news outlet China Daily highlighted how "for too long, Western criteria of beauty, and Western tastes and likes and dislikes dominated aesthetics". That included depicting Asian women in adverts as having narrow eyes, it said."The Chinese people do not need to follow their standards on what constitutes beauty and what kinds of women are considered beautiful.

In Hollywood, the quintessential Asian villain Fu Manchu was pictured with thin and narrow eyes. The character embodied and perpetuated "yellow peril", the racist idea that Asian cultures threatened Western society. "Rejecting 'slanted eyes' is a very dangerous phenomenon, because it is the rejection of aesthetic pluralism," Dr Luwei Rose Luqiu from Hong Kong Baptist University said.Experts have also pointed out that traditional standards of beauty in China had in fact favoured narrow eyes. For example, paintings from what is widely considered as China's golden age for art and culture, the Tang Dynasty period from 618 to 907 AD, prominently featured women with long, narrow eyes.

"Women in contemporary China seem to endorse much of the Western standards for female beauty ideals pervasive in media images," said Dr Jung.

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