From Deseret News archives:

Fixation on image rising?

Published: Monday, March 12, 2007 3:42 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
CHICAGO — With a reputation for emphasizing brains over conventional beauty, the women of the Delta Zeta sorority at Indiana's DePauw University endured the jokes and unkind nicknames: Their chapter was widely known among students as the "dog house."

"As a sorority, they had a different image on campus," says Cindy Babington, the university's dean of students. "Student culture was not kind to them."

Obsessing about looks has long been a rite of passage for young people — well before the days, nearly two decades ago, when tennis star Andre Agassi brashly proclaimed that "image is everything" in an advertising campaign.

Today, though, some worry that the fixation on outward appearance has gotten out of control — with young people's ever-increasing focus on everything from celebrity and skinny jeans to marketing themselves on MySpace, Facebook and YouTube.

The women of Delta Zeta know all about the pressure. With chapter membership dwindling, sorority leaders recently took drastic measures. They kicked out 23 members from the stately brick mansion near campus, drawing accusations that the women's weight, looks and race didn't fit the image the sorority was going for.

Story continues below
Sorority leaders insist that those who left weren't committed to recruiting. "It was not a beauty contest," says Casey Jolley, the chapter's interim president and one of only five members who remain at the house.

But Rachel Pappas, a DePauw junior who was among several other members who left in protest, finds that hard to believe — and calls discrimination based on image "the new racism."

"When you look at all these things and see that all of them have been eliminated, you wonder what it could be other than the image issue," Pappas says.

That the evictions happened so publicly, she adds, now provides the chance to address the larger issue — and a newfound brazenness that cultural trend-watchers say is prompting more people to freely voice their biases.

These days, "American Idol" dedicates hours of airtime to auditions in which judges openly chortle and make fun of would-be contestants' looks, style and personality quirks. Taking a cue from the grocery tabloids, entertainment magazines and TV shows now regularly pick apart celebrities' appearance and attire.

It's no wonder, one professor says, that students feel free to mock those who don't fit their image ideal.

"It's out from under the rocks. They're saying what so many people think and believe," says Thomas Cottle, an education professor at Boston University who has studied the way appearance affects public affirmation. "It's tragic."

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Tom Strattman, Associated Press

Casey Jolley, left, and Amanda Hendren are two of the five remaining members at Delta Zeta house.

previousnext

Latest comments

'Grandfamilies' a growing trend

one thought for grandparents strapped for $...become foster parents and get...

Many Utah fans have no class. You ok with that?

People like sport. If we banned everthing that could go wrong, there would be...

Wait...who is the better team? Oh yeah, the team that won. Who was that...

Thanks, Mike. But in a state where ornery is pronounced with only one r, one...

I really "hate" this holier than thou attitude Who could honestly say that...

This team is a work in progress...stay the course, fans! Have faith! Go, Utes!

It seems that the media is more at fault: when they use words like "holy war"...

As one who has attended many games at RES, I can say that I do fully agree...

Well, of course, BYU's attitude is to forget the incident like it never...

Advertisements