Women struggle daily in order to meet the unrealistic standards of beauty. In the beginning of the music video, Beyonce and the other women are seen doing their hair and makeup and choosing their outfits. In the article, “No More Miss America,” feminists protest that, “women …show more content…
The way they walk, how they speak, and wave all have to be perfect. The article, “No More America,” argue that, the pageants forced women to be oppressed and it enslaves us to be in high heeled, low status roles. Women cannot be ourselves because we are constantly pressured into being perfect, but Beyonce says that “perfection is a disease of a nation” (Beyonce). On the other hand, the representation of masculinity is very limited in the music video. Hypermasculinity is portrayed throughout some of the scenes because it exaggerates how men treat women. When Beyonce gets on the scale towards the middle of the video, the instructor, who is a man, is seen unsatisfied and tells her to get off. It shows how the instructor didn’t think Beyonce was “good enough.” Also, in the article, “No More Miss America,” feminists protest that pageants make “women oppressed and men oppressors” (30). Pageants give no choice but to make men look bad because the judges are usually men. Also, in the article, “An Analysis of Hyper Masculinity in Magazine Advertisements,” they argue that calloused attitudes towards women and sex is one of the masculine gender ideology. The music video portrayed men as judgmental and …show more content…
In the music video, the second verse says, “Blonder hair, flat chest” (Beyonce). Society attempts to make women fit closer to the “ideal women,” which has to have blonde hair and be thin. This excludes the women of color, because it represents only white women. The whole music video portrays the struggles Beyonce went through. Although Beyonce didn’t win, she happily congratulates the winner. In the end, it shows Beyonce, as a little girl, winning a competition in Houston, Texas and giving a speech. In the article, “Multiracial Feminism: Recasting the Chronology of Second Wave Feminism,” Becky Thompson argues that multiracial feminism is characterized by international perspective, it’s attention to interlocking oppressions, and it’s support of coalition. Thompson argues that we don’t have to be in a group to now that an injustice is wrong and to stand against it. Beyonce is a powerful women who advocates female empowerment. Also, in the article, “Age, Race, Class, and Sex,” Audre Lorde argues that “black and third world people are expected to educate white people as to our humanity” (Lorde 104). Beyonce is a perfect example of what Lorde claims in her article. Instead of ignoring the issue, we could simply resolve the issue by breaking the silence. Through her music videos, Beyonce encourages society to change and helps us realize that our world is living in an illusion. She helps us realize