Beauty Redefined


We are Lindsay Kite and Lexie Kite, 27-year-old identical twin sisters finishing our PhDs in Communication at the University of Utah in Spring 2013, studying representations of female bodies in popular media (wrapping up our 10th and final year of college!). We have a passion for helping girls and women recognize and reject harmful messages about their bodies and what “beauty” means and looks like. Beauty Redefinedrepresents our not-for-profit work through the Beauty Redefined Foundation (501(c)(3)) to take back beauty for girls and women everywhere through continuing the discussion about body image, women’s potential and media influence through this website, our Facebook page and most prominently through regular speaking engagements in both secular and religious settings, from universities and high schools to professional conferences and church congregations for all ages.
Our co-authored master’s thesis and current doctoral work forms the basis for a one-hour visual presentation on recognizing and rejecting harmful media ideals about beauty and health, which we have presented to thousands of people across the state of Utah and beyond since March 2009. We will also post the dates of our upcoming speaking engagements if they are open to the public and links to informative articles and resources where you can find additional information on the (mis)representation of women in media.
Beauty Redefined is all about rethinking our ideas of “beautiful” and“healthy” that we’ve likely learned from for-profit media that thrives off female insecurity. Girls and women who feel OK about their bodies — meaning they aren’t “disgusted” with them like more than half of women today* – take better care of themselves. With obesity and eating disorders both at epidemic levels, this point is crucial!
Researchers* have found that overweight girls who were more comfortable with their bodies were more likely to make healthy choices as they entered young adulthood. The girls who felt good about  themselves were more likely to be physically active and pay more attention to what they ate. Meanwhile, the girls who were the most dissatisfied with their size tended to become more sedentary over time and paid less attention to maintaining a healthy diet. This shows that encouraging women to love and care for their bodies – whether or not they match media beauty ideals — may be one way to reverse or at least slow the progression of the health crises on both ends of the spectrum, from eating disorders to obesity. Beauty Redefined aims to continuously promote the idea that all women are worthwhile AND beautiful while fighting against the harmful ideals we’re sold at every turn.
“While we cannot directly affect the images [in media], we can drain them of their power. We can turn away from them and look directly at one another. We can lift ourselves and other women out of the myth.” - Naomi Wolf, The Beauty Myth, p. 277
http://www.beautyredefined.net/

Comments

  1. This is very beautiful. Even though I'm not sure anymore whether me believing in women being beautiful all over the world is a Feminist argument, but I certainly agree that we need to love who we are without letting media messages polute our society with their ever- lasting guessing games on what we really are looking at everywhere is what we must be, but not who we believe me are. This takes quiet a lot of emotional and physical courage as well as meditation to realise the true self

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