Beauty Queens Don't Eat Ice Cream: Conceptions of Beauty in "Little Miss Sunshine"

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Since the Miss America Pageant was established in 1921, conceptions of the beauty of American women have been based, in part, on the winner of this pageant. Sarah Banet-Weiser writes in her book, The Most Beautiful Girl in the World, that “the woman selected as Miss America apparently 'represents' the nation” (Banet-Weiser 56). As a result of representing the American nation, the winner of the Miss America pageant is looked up to as a model for style and beauty among women. Since its inception, the Miss America pageant has come under attack from feminist organizations for exploiting women's bodies despite the fact that it is a scholarship program; the pageant rewards contestants a scholarship for continuing education based on their responses in the interview and the talent portions of the pageant as well as their performance in the swimsuit competition. A beauty pageant, such as the Miss USA pageant, is strictly concerned with a woman's outer beauty and does not include the talent or interview portions. The judges of the Miss America pageant have changed through the years to reflect the changing ideals of the pageant itself. “In the early years of the pageant, the judges were primarily artists and illustrators, in part because such men – and they were all men – were considered to have the best eye for the beautiful feminine form. In more recent years, efforts have been made to attract judges who represent the various facets of the pageant” (Banet-Weiser 54). The selection of judges from the fields represented in the pageant show that the Miss America pageant is more than just a strictly beauty pageant. “Defining beauty is an elusive, if not impossible task. No single definition fits because as culture evolves, so does the... ... middle of paper ... ...et-Weiser, Sarah, and Laura Portwood-Stacer. “'I just want to be me again!': Beauty pageants, reality television and post-feminism.” Feminist Theory 7 (2006): 255-272. Print. Fair, John D. “Mr. and Miss America Contests: A Tale of Contrasting Cultures in The Twentieth Century.” Journal of the Georgia Association of Historians 23 (2002): 1-44. Print. Levey, Hilary. “Pageant Princesses and Math Whizzes: Understanding children's activities as a form of children's work.” Childhood 16 (2009): 195-212. Print. Little Miss Sunshine. By Michael A. Arndt. Prod. Marc Turtletaub. Dir. Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton. Perf. Steve Carell, Greg Kinnear, and Toni Collette. Fox Searchlight Pictures, 2006. DVD. Watson, Elwood, and Darcy Martin. “The Miss America Pageant: Pluralism, Femininity, and Cinderella All in One.” The Journal of Popular Culture 34.1 (2000): 105-126. Print.

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