Tuesday, November 11, 2014

What Does The Perfect Female Body Look Like? [Photos]

 American largest lingerie retailer, Victoria Secret suffered more than a weeklong backlash over an advert campaign that placed the title “The Perfect Body” over a group of svelte supermodels.
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Advocates against the campaign started a petition signed by more than 27,000 people requesting for the campaign to be scrapped and an apology to be tenered. The petitioners argue that the ad campaign sends out an unhealthy and damaging message about women’s bodies and how they should be judged.

Clearly, those behind the campaign and the petitioners are in disagreement about what the perfect body is. Their different views on the subject matter, begs the question, what is the perfect body? And who gets to decide what the perfect body is?

Women’s bodies have changed over the past decades from being strongly built strong for survival to a delicate and slender build. Our great-great grandmothers were appreciated for their natural bodies.


If anything, they were more interested in enhancing their curves than reducing it.

It was a thing of pride and a mark of status to be voluptuous.


In the south-south region of Nigeria, especially the Efik speaking communities, corpulent women were regarded as more alluring, in good health and wealth.

In order to look more attractive young women were confined in rooms for a long period of time with no physical activity during which they were made to consume large portions of food whilst getting lessons in beauty, sex, etiquette and femininity from older women.

The appreciation for full-figured women was not limited to Nigeria alone. Voluptuous women were celebrated across the globe. Paintings from the Renaissance era depicted them as the epitome of sexy.

The Victorian era brought in a slight change in what was considered the perfect body. During this period, sexy meant having the tiniest of waistline. To achieve this look, women wore rib-breaking corsets. The compressed waistline aided a more magnificent derriere-Ghanaian actress Joselyn Dumas is the ideal Victorian sex bomb. The new waist-training trend indicates the desire for a tiny waistline is still on.

The hourglass figure transcended both the roaring 20s of the shorter hemlines and the Hollywood golden age of the 1940s.

The swinging 60s however, drastically changed the views on sexy. This era birthed the thin trend. Curves were out and by the 70s the thinking-thin phenomenon was fully rooted. Women exercised more to get a more toned and skinny body.

This trend is still the standard today even though the average woman is not a size zero. The fashion industry constitutes to cater for the minority. Instead of the majority who are bigger and curvier than those on billboards and magazine covers.

Nollywood actress Genevieve Nnaji’s re-launched clothing line that only goes up to size 14 even though the average Nigerian women cannot fit into a size 14 shows the bias of designers even if it is not deliberate.

The fashion industry in cohort with the media has pushed the stick thin body as the perfect body on us.  From Milan to Lagos skinny starved models cascade down the runways in clothes suitable for 12 year olds in the real world.

The perfect body is just an idea, which changes over time.  Thin might be trending now but, thin also comes in different shapes and mother nature has made it impossible to have a set prototype for the perfect body.

Only a handful of the women in the world are 5”10 and above, with zero percent body fat and the same waist to hip ratio. Therefore the perfect body should be how healthy the shape of the body you have is, and how comfortable you feel in your body.

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