The other day in class a conversation about body image was brought up and it struck a never with a few of the female students in the class. This heated debate was in regards to the passage in William Gibson's Pattern Recognition where Parkaboy describes how he and his friend, Musashi, transformed the body image of Judy into "Keiko" using Photoshop. "What we did was up the wattage for Taki, aiming to maximize libidinal disturbance, we shot this long tall Judy and reduced her by at least a third, in Photoshop. Cut 'n' pasted her into Musashi's kid sister's dorm room at Cal. Darryl did the costuming himself, and then we tried enlarging her eyes a few clicks. That made all the difference. Judy’s epicanthic folds are long gone, the way of the modest bust nature intended for her. . . and the resulting big round eyes were pure Anime magic. This is the girl Taki's been looking for all his life, even though nature's never made one, and he'll know that as soon as he lays eyes on this image." (PR, 129.)
Everything that was said in class by the women in class I agree with 150%. I cannot even imagine how hard things are for women this day in age with our hyper sexualized American culture. That video we watched of the model being transformed in Photoshop like what was described in William Gibson's novel really freaked me out. Seeing how fake everything is that we see is strange to process. This is real life, but everything we see on a daily basis has been distorted and changed so much that it's fake. It really is like we are living in The Matrix. There is no real anymore, only what companies and big business perceive to be real juding on what they think men and women want. I know this distortion of women happens a million times more then men, but I still feel like there is a standard a lot of women hold on men to look like. I mean go to a American Eagle or Hollister and look at the 10 foot pictures of the guys on the wall, a ripped 12 pack abs, huge muscles, super good looking. At least for me I know it sucks to see things like this, to see this is what people see as "attractive". Same goes for movie stars. OMG RYN GOSLING AND CHANNING TATUM ARE SO HOT. Where's the love for the Steve Buscemi's of the world?
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I loved your closing sentence! Couldn't have said it better myself. This semester I have been in a Women Writers class and we discuss all of the time how men also have to bear the burden of perfection, just not as frequently. It is very unfortunate that what our society deems as attractive is nearly always an unreachable level of attractiveness. We both have the same take on Pattern Recognition; that it's so freaky to realize that the way we think, act, and dress has been determined by someone else other than ourselves. Our personal style choices are supposed to define who we are and serve as a form of self expression, but someone in the "cool hunting" business predetermined what the clothes you wear represent. Basically this book left my mind. BLOWN.
ReplyDeleteLoved your line "Where's the love for the Steve Buscemi's of the world?" It cracked me up.
ReplyDeleteI've seen a couple of those Photoshop videos and it really is amazing how they can do that. It would be way too stressful to be someone that looks that way even if it was natural. It's much better to be the real you because that is the only way you can truly be unique in a world that craves uniqueness and perfection.
I think you're quite right, this condition of complete artifice, marketing and image right down to our skin and what's beneath, really is how it is now. And I like the ways you show how you get that, from a number of angles. More specific connections to the book and how it works with this same problem would have been good though.
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