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Issue 49 2009
Are You Finally Comfortable in Your Own Skin?
The Raced and Classed Imperatives for
Somatic/Spiritual Salvation in The Swan
By BRENDA R. WEBER and KAREN W. TICE
[1] When Sylvia is
selected to be a contestant on Fox's makeover and pageant reality show The
Swan, we are told that she has faced a
lifetime of romantic rejection because of her appearance. In documentary-style
footage, Sylvia critiques her bikini-clad body in front of a mirror, speaking
of her desires for smaller thighs and less pronounced ears. Sylvia's boyfriend
provides additional testimony, acknowledging they have a limited sex life
because of Sylvia's body issues. "It's always been a challenge for Sylvia to
stay in shape," her boyfriend explains, "and it is simply because the Latino
community, when it comes to food. . . ." He need not finish his sentence
because the camera does it for him, immediately cutting to Sylvia in sweat pants,
approaching a food truck parked in an urban environment from which she
purchases a dish made of corn, butter, cheese, and mayonnaise.
[2] The panel of
Swan experts who are watching this footage on a television monitor in a
mansion-like set, turn to each other laughing. "Something tells me those
desserts and Latin foods won't be on the menu at the Swan program," says the
host. In addition to losing 30 pounds, Sylvia's conversion from ugly duckling
to swan requires that she undergo multiple cosmetic procedures that address
what her surgeon terms "bland bone structure." She needs a chin implant and
cheekbone lifts, as well as extensive lipo-suction in seven areas of her body
to give her a "more feminine look." Veneers on all of Sylvia's teeth will "make
her mouth look a little smaller." All of this and some psychotherapy
addressing Sylvia's reluctance to trust authority figures, in general, and men
in, particular, will bring about Sylvia's full transformation, making her
"pageant worthy" in three months time.
[3] Those three
months are filled with what The Swan terms a "grueling curriculum" of
pain, isolation, sacrifice, and temptation. Though Sylvia struggles, she
– like all of The Swan's contestants – sheds her "ugly
duckling" appearance and ego, emerging for her reveal ceremony as a beautiful
Swan. When Sylvia enters the Swan mansion for her big reveal dressed in a long
formal gown, full make-up, hair extensions, false eye lashes, and four-inch
heels, her metamorphosis draws gasps from the Swan experts, called the Dream
Team (figure 1). Throughout the narrative told by the show, Sylvia has
confessed her failings, undergone trials, learned to submit to a higher
authority, and now possesses a face and body that mark her as not only
beautiful but, in the words of The Swan's creator, producer, and life
coach Nely Galán, "resurrected," "transcendent," and "powerful" (Wegenstein).
Though Nely's words code Sylvia's makeover as a spiritual experience, the
altered materiality of Sylvia's body is what allows for her legitimate entrance
to the elite white spaces of the Swan mansion. She is no longer a woman whose
body makes her ethnic and class excesses visible; indeed, before she can be a
transcendent Swan, the Latin food she has consumed must quite literally be
sucked from her body. Posing in her sequined gown amidst the opulence of
chandeliers and marble staircases, we get the sense that Sylvia had to lose her
fondness for eating fattening "ethnic" food from a truck as much as she needed
to "feminize" her body, refine her nose, and pin back her ears.
[4]
We begin with Sylvia because her story so fully expresses the race and
class-centered story of shame, surrender, and salvation told by The Swan.
Sylvia's experience illustrates a logic
whereby makeover renewals require a conversion that produces a conventionally
gendered woman for whom other signifiers of identity, such as race, class, and
ethnicity, are still present but have been subordinated to an image
representing what the show calls "gorgeous womanhood." If we consider that
those targeted for Swanly renovations are, like Sylvia, coded as "ugly
ducklings," whose poor choices, ethnic excess, and downward mobility stem from
their appearance, then we begin to see how The Swan illustrates the
complex relationships between gender, race, ethnicity, and class at work in the
making of the beautiful image, all sutured together through a religious
framework that draws heavily from Christian, Buddhist, new-age, and self-help
spiritual rhetorics.
[5]
Since such miraculous conversions often require the diminishment of bodily
markers indicating "non-normative" iterations of race and class, then we must
conclude that the transcendent empowerment offered women on The Swan is
presumed to exist in an unmarked category, where race and class factors
invisibly contribute to social identity location. As scholars who work in
critical race studies have theorized, such reasoning that claims the unmarked
as the natural and normative is frequently dedicated to the production of a
middle-class whiteness, here transmitted through the transformation rhetoric
that fuels Galán's mediated makeovers, so that, as Thomas DiPiero, explains,
"whiteness produces itself as an apparently empty category" (105, see also
Roediger, Negra). The invisibility of the normative, Roland Barthes has told
us in The Mythologies, is also a critical element of the function and
performance of the bourgeoisie, through which the process of representation
"completely disappears" as an "ideological fact" (138). Thus, "bourgeois
norms" are both referenced and experienced "as the evident laws of a natural
order—the further the bourgeois class propagates its representations, the
more naturalized they become" (140). On The Swan, such classed and
raced values are coded through image, so that passing requires not cultural or
knowledge capital but semiotic signification. Such reliance on the image, in
turn transforms conventional ways of inscribing and interpreting race,
ethnicity, and class, since what is valued in the made-over woman are
signifiers that connote middle-class discipline (restrained forms of emotional
and embodied excess), while surrounded by and clad in upper-class accoutrement
(gowns, chauffeurs, tuxedo-clad doormen, Romantic paintings, mansions).

Figure 1 click for larger version
[6]
The degree to which this classed and raced image evokes elements of the
religious is critical. In her Theory of the Image, for instance, Ann
Kibbey has suggested that modern capitalism as we presently experience it
relies on an historical provenance indebted to Calvin as much as to Marx.
Protestant iconoclasm, she argues, resisted "false images, not all images"
(10). In the representation of the human body, contends Kibbey, there is both
a "living human being" and "representational image," thus establishing a logic
of conversion that enables something new to materialize that did not previously
exist: "[Y]ou have become something that you were not before, even though you
remain physically the same person" (15). Such a logic, she notes, "converts the
ordinary person or object into something that is retrospectively perceived as
inadequate," in turn heightening the salvational powers of the intercessionary
agent (15). The gendered implications of this logic are profound, says Kibbey,
since the sum of womanhood has often been linked to the image, which, in turn,
posits the converted woman as she who is "filled by a new kind of spiritual
presence, image-ness itself" (40).
[7]
So, we see that class and race-based messages about the image are communicated through
a discourse of religiosity, all of which naturalize the woman's transformation
from ugly duckling to swan. Much like its creator Galán, The Swan
speaks in redemptive discourses that blend free choice, consumerism,
individualism, personal empowerment, and spiritualism that have recently been
understood as motivations for cosmetic surgery, beauty pageantry, and image
makeovers (Covino, Pitts, Tice "Queens," Bhaskaran, Banet-Weiser). Because The
Swan gives its contestants a very real form of cultural currency, we do not
dismiss the program here as simply a tool for female objectification or racial
assimilation. Instead, we argue that in its creation of a very specific
woman-centered theology, The Swan opens a space where the constitution
of female power and identity are problematized. While The Swan offers a very limited model of female empowerment in
its reliance on physical beauty and its treatment of race, ethnicity, and
class, it also allows for a distinctive form of female subjectivity that is made
manifest through the signifying power of the body.
The Swan in Context
[8] The Swan is one of nearly 150 makeover
programs that have flooded expanded U.S. cable since 2000, participating in
what Rachel Moseley has described in Britain as a "makeover takeover" that is
equaled, if not bettered, in the United States. Makeovers dominate reality
programming for complex reasons that include an aging baby boomer population
eager to see stories about recaptured youth and the exigencies of reality TV
production that have put an onus on non-unionized workers and non-fiction
formats (factors of some significance in the wake of the Writers Guild of
America strikes in 1998 and 2007-8). Though TV makeovers draw upon multiple
ideological rationales to validate their transformations – from
neoliberalism to American individualism to postfeminism – we focus
specifically in this article on discourses of race, class, and religion that
work as a motivating justification for change, using The Swan as an
important test case to map a logic that is manifest across the larger genre.
[9]
There are other Reality TV makeovers that engage in plastic surgery (Extreme
Makeover, I Want a Famous Face, Miami Slice, Dr. 90210,
Brand New You), that bring about change through weight loss (The
Biggest Loser, The Craze, National Body Challenge), or that
require subjects to undergo therapeutic counseling (Starting Over, Maxed
Out). There are also other makeover shows that build beauty pageants into
their renovation systems (Instant Beauty Pageant, Mo'Nique's F.A.T.
Chance). But since the combined surge of reality TV and makeover
programming began, no show has managed to combine all of these elements except
for The Swan. This, in itself, may be a dubious claim to fame,
particularly since the actual air dates of The Swan were somewhat short
lived – two seasons in 2004, the first March through April, the second
October through December. And yet, as one indication of its popular imprint,
at the time of its airing in 2004, The Swan made repeated news in
national newspapers and entertainment magazines, including USA Today and
People (a form of recognition shared by very few reality programs).
[10]
The Swan continues as a media touchstone, since it is still broadcast,
talked about, referenced, and parodied. The show is a highly successful export
commodity (it was sold to more than 50 international media markets),
redistribution (it airs in the U.S. on Fox Reality and the Style network),
product (both boxed sets of the television and the spin-off book, The Swan
Curriculum, are available for sale
online and in stores), and social phenomenon (in addition to the reality
celebrity that enabled participants to become models, television personalities,
and cover girls, The Swan's experts and style gurus appear across the
makeover canon, including on such shows as 10 Years Younger and How
Do I Look?. As we will note, message boards still discussed The Swan's
"radical transformations" some three years after its cancellation. Indeed, as
of this writing, Nely Galán, The Swan's creator, producer, and life
coach, is developing The New You, a television-cum-web program that
reunites The Swan's surgeons and coaches to revitalize women who are
"just looking for a miracle." Galán was also one of the participants in NBC's Celebrity
Apprentice (2008), her personal currency having appreciated due to The
Swan's cachet. A further sign of The Swan's continuing media
footprint is The Today Show's (NBC) 2006-2007 featuring of Galán's The
New You, complete with testimonials to the values of shocking
transformations that refer to The Swan as a touchstone and originary
text. Indeed, Galan's website indicates that The Swan's dream team will
live again in The New You when it broadcasts on NBC.
[11]
It is not just The Swan's omnipresence but its ideological structure and
cultural relevance, we argue here, that make it a text worthy of scholarly
attention. This particular makeover/pageant show has been referenced widely in
other recent analyses that discuss postfeminism, makeovers, governmentality,
pageantry, and consumerism (Banet-Weiser and Portwood-Stacer, Roof, Deery,
Weber "Makeover," Poster, Zylinska, Heller The Great, Makeover).
These analyses speak to the richness of The Swan as a cultural text, and
yet they do not fully get at the heart of its psycho-spiritual redemptive
authority or the manner in which it subordinates non-normative iterations of
race, class, and ethnicity in the creation of "appropriately" gendered women. The
Swan does so in the context of a contemporary cultural landscape in which,
as James Beckford notes, "variants on ideas of spiritual and religious
liberation have seeped into sundry spheres of life" (138). In fact, a number
of scholars have traced the ways that popular and media culture have blurred
the traditional boundaries between the sacred and the secular, material and
spiritual, body and soul (Lowney, Motley, Lofton, Smith-Shomade, Egan and
Papson), in some cases noting how Evangelicals have embraced spiritualized
body-centered makeovers to help Christian woman uplift their sagging spirits
and bust lines (Tice "Looking"). Such emphases on faith-based consumerism take
place against a cultural backdrop where companies are increasingly catering to
the buying power of the Evangelical dollar with such niche products as Grapes
of Galilee wine and "thongs of praise" (underwear with an image of the Madonna
and child). The phenomenon of religion-as-retail has been widely reported (and
mocked), with articles in the London Daily Telegraph (Petre) the Denver
Post (Draper) and syndicated in News of the Weird (Shepherd). The Swan thus takes place within
a larger secular/spiritual context, where the discourses of religion often work
to validate consumerism. In the case of The Swan, consumers/subjects
are asked not only to authenticate the output of money involved in extensive
plastic surgery, individualized life coaching, and four-months of residence in
high-end resort hotels, but to "buy" the ideological imperatives of shame,
surrender, and salvation necessary to achieve an amalgamated spiritual/secular
end.
[12]
Television makeovers more specifically - whether of body or home, kids or dogs
- function as an insistent mediated site for the manufacture and display of
such typically religious experiences as spiritual crisis, shame, penitence,
surrender, worship, and transcendence. They offer a modality for improvement
through conspicuous consumption, a protected zone of care and critique,
bordered by a strict governing structure of rules and authoritative edicts.
The makeover as theme has strong antecedents in both literary and religious
texts as well as in women's advice literature and beauty magazines. The
reality TV makeover similarly offers a place of redemption in the name of
coherent gender identity, race and class signification, and self-improvement.
A critical mass of programming now airs across global televised networks, each
show offering modes of salvation that are predicated on class-specific
principles of good consumerism and care of the self that offer the gateway to
promised everlasting happiness. So, for instance, on Brand New You, a
British makeover program that sends eight white women to Hollywood so that they
might receive plastic surgery, opening credits depict hands pressed together in
prayer, juxtaposed against a pale blue sky. As music swells to indicate the
onset of the show, the palms separate to release an illuminated white dove that
iconographically evokes spiritual release through embodied change.
[13] Other programs pick up (and drop) religion as a motivating principle for
the makeover as needed to validate the transformation regimes they offer.
Across the makeover canon, shows invoke a logic of necessary renewal made
available to those who have suffered and now desire salvation, a motif of merit
and intercession seen from Extreme Makeover: Home Edition to Deserving
Design. The Swan is noteworthy in the ways that it employs notions
of revival, blends secular and spiritual transformation, and utilizes
psychotherapeutic frameworks to advance its goal of a feminine/female
transcendence that exists free of race, ethnic, and class information. We look
specifically at the logics that mark the Swan makeover/pageant conversion
regime as a redemptive and racialized enterprise of humiliation, trial,
conversion, and triumph. This, in turn, reinforces larger U.S. mobility
narratives where self-enterprise, individual responsibility, and the Protestant
work ethic are thought to yield both heavenly salvation and worldly fulfillment
while overcoming barriers erected by race and/or class oppression. On The
Swan, spiritual and secular logics fuse to create a salvation that is
marked by achieving a "knock-dead gorgeousness," where pre-makeover signifiers
of race, class, and ethnicity must be refashioned in order to claim one's
"authentic" identity.
Body-Based
Shame: "I feel completely unbearably disgusted with myself."
[14]
The opening segment of each episode on The Swan makes clear that
dynamics of shame and surrender are mandatory for those women who will undergo
the Swan program. More tacit is the suggestion that shame can only be
eradicated when "ugly ducklings" submit to transforming race and class markers.
On this show we therefore see evidence of television extending what Sandra
Bartky has identified as "pedagogies of shame" that create "the necessity for
hiding and concealment" (228). Shame itself is a common trope of the
surveillance-oriented nature of reality TV (Palmer Discipline, "On Our
Best," "Video," Andrejevic, Johnson-Woods). Since The Swan's goal is to
increase empowerment though an "improved" embodiment of the female subject, and
since this enhancement is intricately tied to normalized codes of femininity,
race, class, and ethnicity, these shaming rituals function as a critical factor
in the show's creation of gendered transcendence.
[15] As evidenced
in the case of Sylvia, all Swan participants begin their segments of the show
before a mirror, cataloging the body flaws that have handicapped their
emotional well-being through self-hate, failed heterosexual relationships, and
neglect. Their personal narratives underscore an injustice whose root cause is
failed beauty and the consequent class and gender-shame perceived ugliness
brings. The Swan's message underscores that to establish a beautiful
somatic/spiritual interiority, the policing of the shameful body in the name of
normalcy is crucial. So as we saw, Sylvia must forego eating Latin food from a
truck in order to be transformed, whereas other Swan participants explicitly
marked pre-makeover as raced or working class must learn middle-class codes of
discipline and refinement (angry African-American Kim learns to forgive, timid
Native American Merline learns to be assertive).
[16] Galán,
herself, is an interesting case study in ethnic assimilation, a fact made most
telling in her self-help book The Swan Curriculum. "I was twenty-three
with a perm, gapped teeth, and a Frida Kahlo unibrow," she confesses (np). But
after a "boob lift," lipo-suction, a nose job, and extensive therapy and life
coaching, she considers herself attractive, a fact validated, she notes, by
being listed as one of People Magazine's "most beautiful people"
(significantly, not People's Hispanic
edition). Though the color of her skin did not change, the markers of
ethnicity on her body did. Historically, as Elizabeth Haiken notes, plastic
surgery has been consistently used so that "immigrants and members of
less-favored ethnic groups" can claim the ability to alter their identification
as "something 'other' than the Anglo-Saxon American standard" (182). In a 2004
interview, Galán proudly claimed her Cuban heritage, and announced, "my mission
is to tell the story of Latin people in the U.S." ("Swan Creator"). When only
5% of applicants to the first season of The Swan were Latina, Galán
actively worked to recruit greater diversity, going to Spanish radio stations
and placing ads in Spanish-language papers (Case). And yet, such commitments
to ethnic diversity wavered in 2006-7 when during pre-production for The New
You, Galán said that after The Swan, "I realized that the first half
of my career, dedicated to producing shows for the Latino market, was probably
over. The second half of my career would be devoted to helping women stay
well, live longer and feel beautiful" (Carrison). Though such goals do not
automatically exclude ethnicity, Galán's remarks suggest that ethnicity served
a limited function. Situated in her own Hollywood mansion and now called a
"media tycoon," Galán's professional success seemingly allows ethnicity to take
a back seat to her transcendent identity as a beautiful and successful woman.
[17] Indeed,
although social identity locations, like race and class, are critical to
selecting those who will participate on The Swan, race and class move
into positions of secondary importance through the processes of the makeover.
So, for instance, The Swan identifies Sylvia as Latina, but the
particular Latin culture Sylvia comes from is less important to the show than
the fact of its high-calorie dishes, which are represented in the fat deposits
on Sylvia's thighs, stomach, and buttocks. Throughout the run of the show,
almost a third of the participants were marked as "non-white." Most, like
Sylvia, were generically termed Latina. We learn that Cristina is an
Equadorian-national, yet the more salient part of her story is that
pre-makeover, she can only get a job cleaning offices. At her reveal, she
thanks God for her transformation and says, "I came for the American dream like
so many Latinas do." In a follow-up People profile three months later,
Cristina works as an office administrator who perceives herself as beautiful
(Green and Lipton, 59). As indicated here, absorption into the American dream
involves assimilation into a beauty culture that enables Cristina the psychic
and somatic freedom to participate in American-style meritocracy.
[18] This access
to meritocratic upward mobility in no way exempts The Swan from the way it imagines beauty as marked by both
whiteness and affluence, but it does give fuller credibility to Swan
contestants who, regardless of race, ethnicity, or class status, seek the
extreme transformations offered through the Swan program as a way of
transcending their body-based shame. As Kathy Peiss's work on the social
history of beauty culture has shown, though the cosmetics industry is never
"far removed from the fact of white supremacy," make-up itself has allowed
individual women, regardless of race or class, the opportunity to assert "their
right to self-creation through the 'makeover' of self-image" (203, 6). Though The
Swan offers a far more radicalized transformation than that discussed by
Peiss, the dual possibilities for both self-creation and submission are
mutually possible in The Swan's logics. Beauty, then, serves as an intermediary currency that buys
Swan participants the appearance of upward mobility.
[19] This
effacement of specific race and class discourses, however, does not eliminate
the ways in which the "aesthetic face," as Anne Balsamo puts it, "symbolizes a
desire for standardized images of Caucasian beauty" (212), a fact graphically
underscored when The Swan explicitly labels the bumps and bulges on
Sylvia's body as a consequence of her vague ethnic origin. Indeed, although
all of The Swan's contestants save one "need" liposuction, it's only in
the case of "those who have ethnic skins" that excesses are attributed to
cultural/ethnic factors rather than simply "bad" habits. Surgery does not, of
course, erase Sylvia's ethnicity. She is still as fully – and as
ambiguously – Latina as she was before the operation. But surgery and
the entire makeover induced by the Swan program brings Sylvia more fully into a
culturally constructed version of appearance that subordinates race and class
concerns to an iteration of gender that is resolutely whitened and not working
class. Though scholars such as Maxine Craig, Ruth Holliday and Jacqueline
Sanchez Taylor argue that in a broader sociological world there is no singular
version of beauty, particularly for women of color, The Swan tells a
different story, offering a mediated example of what Herman Gray calls an
"assimilationist discourse of invisibility" that, in its refusal to allow for
difference, creates a world premised on "color blindness, similarity, and
universal harmony" (85). The consequence of such assimilationist narratives,
Gray notes, is that race becomes situated as a factor of individual experience
whereby "the individual ego [constitutes] the site of social change and transformation"
(85). This, in turn, privileges a "subject position . . .necessarily that of
the white middle class" where "whiteness is the privileged yet unnamed place
from which to see and make sense of the world" (86). Within this regime gender
normalcy is coded as white, an amalgam of middle and upper classes,
heterosexually desirable, confident, and well-adjusted. The surface logic of
the program collapses racial and class diversity into emotional and
psychological hardship, thus suggesting that the wounds of a racist or classist
culture can be healed through the balm of beauty.

Figure 2 click for larger version
[20]
Regardless of social identity factors, then, The Swan suggests that the
ontological category called (ugly) woman necessitates radical transformation in
the name of gender conformance. The narrative and visual presentations are
punctuated with video clips that substantiate this need. As we meet each new
Swan contestant, we see drained and depressed women dressed in baggy clothes
who speak of their deep unhappiness. Many of the women are described as
hyper-masculine or manlike, as in the case of Cindy and Marsha who are
"shameful shavers." Surgeons report that Rachel and DeLisa (both of whom win
the pageant in their respective seasons) have blocky bodies that need feminizing.
In tandem with gender and class shame, we see emotional despair: Kelly was
isolated and spit on by the other children; Dawn's father rejected her; Tanya
hides from people. Shame is the common denominator binding these women, a
shame that has written itself on their bodies, shaped their psyches, and marked
supplicants as needing redemption. Significantly, pre-madeover women are not
depicted as out-of-control and hyper-sexualized, as on other reality TV fare.
Instead, they are dutiful but dowdy: hardworking, responsible, and morose
women whose shame is a matter of internalized social sanction rather than
deliberate transgression. In this regard, improving Swan candidates' class
position is equated with creating a beautiful body that can interrupt what the
show implies are superficial factors, such as poverty or familial heritage,
that lead to bad teeth, an uneven complexion, or cellulite-riddled thighs.
Significantly, spiritual riches are here evoked through material rewards.
[21]
On-screen imagery further emphasizes this point. Through the large frame of
the mansion's state-of-the art projection system, confessions from Swan
hopefuls are offered via videotape from their tattered living rooms or crowded
bedrooms. Though their appeals speak to a desire to alleviate their body-based
shame, there is also a class-based appeal at work, suggesting that their
appearance has blocked full participation in a meritocratic economy, which has,
in turn, hampered their spiritual development. As if to emphasize the rewards
a beautiful body will bring, The Swan visually contrasts the
contestants' modest home spaces with repeated images of opulence, including an
establishing shot of an enormous mansion seemingly in Hollywood. From the
marble foyer to the gilded stair railings to the Romantic paintings in heavy
frames on the wall, this is a scene depicting luxury and expense, in turn
suggesting the link between material and spiritual rewards.
[22]
Throughout the program, these semiotic markers of class status are emphasized,
even as the bodily signs of makeover subjects' working-class lives, what Vivyan
Adair calls "the not so hidden injuries of class," are reversed (28). The
program suggests that image in itself will assure a woman's entrance to such
rarified places as the Swan mansion. Participants do not, for instance, need
to learn other "lady-like" competencies such as proper etiquette, social
conversation, or table manners, as do women on such reality TV programs as Ladette
to Lady, American Princess, or Australian Princess. Instead,
they must only look the part to earn their reward. Race and ethnicity are
equally germane to this logic of access and ascension since only those who
satisfy a "whitened," assimilated image are allowed within the mansion, meaning
that all of the ugly ducklings, whether identified as Caucasian, Hispanic or
African-American, require the Swan's ritual blanching as part of their
makeover. Here it is important to note that whiteness on The Swan is
less about skin color than appearance. Mirroring what Elizabeth Haiken has
analyzed about race and ethnicity at the turn of the twentieth century, at the
Swan mansion whiteness is defined as an absence of identifiable racial markers,
as well as any class markers that might constitute a "significant deviation
from the average" (Haiken, 181). For more on how cosmetic surgery has been
deployed to alter racial and ethnic markings, see Kaw, Banales, and Gilman).
Whiteness, in this sense, operates as the unmarked. And significantly, The
Swan's bodily renovations create a classed whiteness fit for Hollywood
mansions, not suburbs or trailer parks.
The Shame of the Ordinary: "A
self-confessed average girl."
[23] As we've
observed, though The Swan specifically targets and labels "women of
color" for its rejuvenations, women coded as white are in equal need of a
makeover. The value The Swan places on gorgeous womanhood cannot
tolerate what it derides as average, a fact underscored when Caucasian Rachel
is described as "a self-confessed average girl." Women in real life and on
makeover shows often claim that their decision to seek out plastic surgery is
not predicated on being beautiful but on being normal, yet there is a very
clear bias on The Swan against those bodies that signify as average.
Consider, for instance, the surgeon's statement that starts every show: "Our
goal is to transform average women into confident beauties." His words set up
a binary, making it impossible, according to the logic established by the
narrative, for "average" women to be either confident or beautiful. His
statement also suggests that beauty and confidence are inter-changeable terms,
so there can be no insecure but good-looking woman. Individual episodes
underscore this same reasoning. For instance, Rachel confides, "I feel average
because when I look in the mirror, that's what I see." On another episode,
Caucasian Sarina confesses, "I'm just OK. I'm not ugly. I'm not pretty. I'm
just kinda there. When I look in the mirror, I see the 'ultimate Plain Jane.'"
[24] The shame of
averageness is hardly exclusive to Rachel or Sarina. Throughout each episode
there is a very clear sense that to be ordinary rightfully contributes to
feelings of isolation and deep unhappiness. The discourse of averageness sets
up a clear division. On the "bad" side are a number of co-related terms:
ugliness, ordinariness, and blandness that lead to being ignored, which is
coded as undesirable and unworthy. On the "good" side there is seemingly one
signifier: beauty, and as we have demonstrated thus far, beauty is
connotatively linked to gender normativity that articulates through race and
class codings. Beauty, in turn, leads to the most precious of all signifiers:
success, happiness, love, confidence, appreciation, power, and somatic and
spiritual transcendence.
[25]
Given the homogeneity of beauty as a signifier, it makes sense that the
pluralism represented by the "before" version of the women is almost entirely
obliterated in "after" images. Not only are "imperfect" bumps and bulges
refined, but so are most markers of class, race, and ethnicity. So, for
instance, African-American Kim loses her cornrows for long straight silky hair,
and Native American Merline, who cannot afford dentistry, is given a
million-dollar smile. The quest to make these women seem less average requires
that "conventional" beauty be the exclusive signifier. Even those women
clearly marked as white and/or middle class, such as police officer Cinnamon,
must transform from dull to luminous, losing her brown curly shoulder-length
hair for shiny platinum blonde extensions. It's not a subtle process. One
sense of the popular reaction to The Swan's transformations came from
the actress Susan Sarandon, who observed, "I saw a commercial for The Swan,
a before and after makeover show, and the woman in it had a particularly ethnic
face; but in the 'after' she ended up looking like a female impersonator, and
that's horrible" ("Sarandon Speaks," 200).
[26]
Indeed, the whitening effects meant to further a race and class-specific
version of hyper-femininity were still being discussed at least three years
after The Swan originally aired, as evident in a 2007 snopes.com
conversation thread titled, "There are no ugly women, only poor women" (figure
2). Many postings, like one from BringTheNoise, comment on The Swan's post-makeover appearances as artificial and
approximating, "generic Hollywood wannabes" (3/16/07). In response, trollface
notes, "Want to know what I think is the most horrible and insidious part of
their plasticizing? Look at the comparative skin colors of Cindy Ingle and
Christina Tyree. Don't they look awfully white in the "after" pics? I don't care whether
it's due to skin-bleaching, make up or retouching the photo afterwards, I think
it says something very, very bad about a society where the lightness of skin is
an indicator of 'beauty'" (3/19/07).
[27] Internet
conversation boards such as this suggest that viewers may be highly resistant
to the salvation-through-surgery messages that The Swan espouses. And
yet, The Swan's insistence on a particular kind of surgical beauty
potentially offers a complicated outcome made manifest through the ambiguous
difference between what is average and what is normal. Scholars such as Kathy
Davis have argued, for instance, that plastic surgery is capable of intervening
at the level of identity, rather than simply of appearance, because it makes
women "become ordinary and normal – 'just like everyone else'" (Dubious
98). Both Debra Gimlin and Victoria Pitts-Taylor further suggest that plastic surgery
plays a critical role in identity formation in the way it enables the surgery
recipient to align the body with an inner sense of self. Gimlin reflects, "I
believe that women who have plastic surgery are not necessarily doing so in
order to become beautiful or to please particular individuals. Instead they
are responding to highly restrictive notions of normality and the 'normal'
self, notions that neither apply to the population at large (in fact, quite the
reverse) nor leave space for ethnic variation" (96). (For more on feminist
responses to plastic surgery, see Balsamo, Blum, Chapkis, Covino, Davis Reshaping,
Fraser, Frost, Morgan, Weber "Beauty," Wolf). Popular message boards, like
that on snopes.com, evidence a non-scholarly investment in these same debates.
In this discussion stream, for instance, of 96 responses, 63 used The Swan
to debate matters of what constitutes naturalness, including whether or not
make-up, hair color, surgery, or even tattoos produced results so artificial
that they were "cheating."
[28] Both
academic and popular responses thus indicate the very schism between the normal
and the normative that functions as the epistemological cornerstone for shame
on The Swan. At stake is not what actually exists pre makeover, or what
might exist post transformation, but what participants believe should
exist. This is the terrain of the imaginary. The Swan plays a role in
feeding this imaginary by suggesting that normativity is keyed to the
extraordinary, a location relentlessly coded as a whitened, middle- to
upper-class, and ratified by the adoring gaze. Though The Swan
candidates' pre-made-over wrinkles and cellulite as well as their bodily
anxieties make them far more normal than do their post-makeover runway-ready
bodies, the stigma that The Swan places on the "average girl" compels
her to desire the normative over the normal. We see a situation, then, where
the defining power of what constitutes the norm, as Michel Foucault suggested,
not only establishes the normal but regulates and makes intelligible the
aberrant, here coded as dowdy and visibly classed or raced. On The Swan,
the values of the norm jettison subjects into the exceptional "gorgeous woman,"
offering an outcome not about fitting in with others but in surpassing them.
The ugly duckling who has desired to become normal achieves her goal by
transcending the imaginary exemplum of every-woman. As Rachel Moseley notes
about makeover shows more broadly, "These are, precisely, instances of powerful,
spectacular 'über-ordinariness'" (314). The made-over subject becomes the
quintessential representative of the extra-ordinary, a category of the unmarked
that functions as the idealized signifier of a whitened and upwardly-mobile
subject. The post-makeover woman exists in an ethnically anonymous state where
it is her beauty, rather than her racial, ethnic, or class features, that code
her identity.
Surrender: "She surrendered to her transformation
inside and out."
[29] Before a
transforming Swan can bask in her moment of transcendence at the pageant, she
must fully surrender to the Swan regime. Thus, after the show establishes its
participants' shame, it moves to its narrative heart where makeover subjects
are continually reminded of both the sacrifice expected of them and the
imperative to surrender in order to achieve the salvation that is promised by
the Swan pageant. The Swan functions on the premise that only complete
capitulation will achieve totalizing bliss, repeating elements of the conversion
trope that require what Hans Mol identifies as a "re-ordering of priorities and
values" that often compels the convert to repeat "over and over again how evil,
or disconsolate, or inadequate he [sic] was before the conversion took place"
(53). The intra-episode repetitions of subjects' bodily and psychic shames,
then, serve to underscore and strengthen their new faith in the Swan regime.
By looking more closely at the mechanisms for encouraging Swan contestants to
sacrifice and surrender, specifically the doctor/patient relationship, Galán's
mentoring and spiritual goals, and the therapeutic inspiration Swan contestants
experience, we further demonstrate a complicated power dynamic riddled with
messages about gender, race, and class.
[30] Galán has
described her version of surrender as not giving over "to someone else's vision
of what you should look like. I think surrendering is . . . being the best
you can be inside and out" (Wegenstein). She attributes Rachel's successful
transformation and ultimate crowning at the beauty pageant to her willingness
to surrender:
Rachel simply
surrendered to her path. Rachel came ready to change. She surrendered to
finding her "aha" moment. One of the big issues on the show is control.
Surrender and control, which is the hardest thing people have. Sometimes you
have to surrender to experts, sometimes to God. You have to surrender. And
for people who are control freaks, it's very hard. (Wegenstein)
The Swan's creator here uses
the language of spiritual surrender to legitimate The Swan's demand that
acolytes relinquish personal control in order to gain transcendent womanhood.
[31] The gendered
power dynamics of the surrender mandated by the Swan regime are particularly
evident when female contestants interact with their male surgeons. Each
patient undergoes multiple surgeries, yet the physical feat is depicted as a
triumph not for the patient but for her doctors, a process that puts on display
the multiple power inequities between doctor and patient along gendered, raced,
and classed lines, as well as the power differentials of education, expertise,
and status. Scenes in which the doctors talk about the processes invariably
suggest that performing the procedures require extraordinary skill, whereas
enduring the surgeries requires only obedience, discipline, and surrender.
Surgeon Terry Dubrow, for instance, characterizes Gina D's surgery as "the
hardest nose I've ever done. In fact, this is the hardest operation I've ever
done." The severity of the "problem" for all of the Swan contestants serves
to underscore the idea that failing to invest in beauty invariably leads to
both a health and a spiritual crisis. In creating this logic, The Swan
establishes a virtual fear economy where beauty constitutes a necessity more
dire than clothing children or putting food on the table. As the host says
about another Swan hopeful, "Andrea learns there is a high price to pay for
neglecting her teeth." Given these pronouncements, it's no wonder that many of
The Swan's contestants are scared straight into surrendering their
psyches and bodies to the treatment of the Swan experts. Though as Suzanne
Fraser has demonstrated, actual doctor/patient relationships engage in a far
more nuanced power dynamic, The Swan's representation underscores
binaries in which authority and submission are both totalized and naturalized.
Indeed, just as in more traditional religious structures, it is the perceived
stability of these power relations that lead swans to their salvation.
[32] In its
combination of weight loss, life coaching, and therapeutic change, The Swan ups
the ante on the suffering that subjects must endure in order to claim "gorgeous
womanhood." Further, the sorts of mediated power dynamics The Swan
projects, where all-knowing authorities supervise the labors of those beneath
them through a combination of coercion and care, enacts not just a godly
metaphor but a labor paradigm of boss and worker. The represented power
inequity between makeover subjects and experts serves to reinforce the
naturalness of their differences, offering yet further evidence of The
Swan's re-enactment of the power differentials that accrue around race and
class difference. Contestants must continually learn to trust expertise and
follow the rules, to give themselves over fully to the Swan program, and to
invest in and reify the authority that accrues to the Dream Team, which is
collectively coded as white, educated, and elite. These lessons are not
depicted as coming easily for Swan candidates. Though each participant is
joyfully grateful for the experience to undergo extreme transformation, there
is plenty of backsliding and recalcitrance. We are shown subjects who sneak
full-fat yogurt or who willfully refuse to wear their chinstraps. As with most
makeover shows, giving textual time to resistance moments emphasizes narrative
tension and reinforces the rightness of the power balance so that those in a
position of expertise coach and compel, while those needing help must learn to
relinquish their resistance.
[33] During these
times of tribulation and struggle, the producer and life coach preaches her
version of tough love. "From this moment on," Galán tells one participant,
"you have to think military." Her admonition is intercut with a similar
message from the personal trainer. "This is a "24/7 commitment." Over and
over, the experts underscore the rigor of this program, as does the voiceover
narrator, who asks about each candidate, "Is she tough enough to endure the
Swan program?" The implication is clear: transformation is not an easy
process. It requires suffering, sacrifice, fortitude, and a complete
sublimation of the ego. The subjects' only salvation in the face of such
adversity is to trust and obey their advisors. Indeed, the more contestants
surrender to experts, the more likely they are to "win" the particular episode
and be rewarded with participation in the pageant. Galán doesn't mince words
when speaking about the importance of obedience to (her) authority. "I'm really
happy with Sylvia's result because she worked really hard, she has a great
personality, and she surrendered to the program."
[34] Within the
conversion process, Galán is a significant agent of both authority and
affection. She can be a tough advocate, but she also functions as a comforting
and soothing confidante, often reassuring Swan participants that she empathizes
with their pain. Galán has publicly credited her success in the entertainment
industry with the mentoring she has received – the same mentoring that
she purports to offer the Swan participants. Her role models, she explains,
have helped her bridle her "incredible passions." "People told me not to do
certain things and I didn't listen. Now when my mentors tell me something, I
listen" (Oldenberg 3D). Surrender, in Nely's opinion, is not a form of
disempowerment. It is a clear choice to assemble experts and adhere without
question to their advice. Galán's message of surrender endorses regulation in
the name self-empowerment, yet her words also reinforce stereotypes about the
passionate excess of Latinas, an excess that must be curbed to achieve
successful assimilation. Further, in Galán's re-telling of her
surrender-to-mentors narrative, her own agency is critical. She selected her
advisors, carefully choosing whom she would approach and exerting a degree of
autonomy in her choices about whose advice mattered to her. Although Swan
contestants have applied to be on the program, they are disallowed a comparable
degree of agency in their options for change. Indeed, they are asked to sign
on to a process, to forego active monitoring of its progress, to isolate
themselves from a support network of friends and family, and to allow their
experiences to become media products that can be sold and distributed
internationally.
[35] Therapy plays a further critical role in naturalizing
the surrender demands and in reinforcing the tacit imperatives about race and
class that are a part of the Swan regime. The Swan is unlike any other
extensive plastic surgery show in its prioritizing of the therapeutic process
as part of the overall transformation. In this regard, surgery is represented
not as a replacement for therapy but as a co-facilitator of change. Galán has
said that were The Swan a product fully of her design and not subject to
the edicts of the Fox network, she would have made it far more about therapy
than plastic surgery (Wegenstein). In an interview with Hispanic Magazine,
she emphasized the importance of working with feelings: "If you don't do the
inside job . . . it doesn't matter if you get a nose job or a boob job; you'll
feel bad again" (Pliagas). The Swan's psychologist, Lynn Ianni, is therefore depicted in each episode working
with Swan contestants on their issues of childhood traumas, abandonment,
betrayal, and poor self-esteem. Most have relationship problems; several
struggle with low sexual desire. They have been too giving, too willing to
violate their own boundaries for the sake of others. Therapy is prescribed as
part of Merline's plan, then, so that she can "learn how to tackle her
insecurities and focus on herself." The process of becoming a Swan not only
involves greater surface beauty but deeper psychological resiliency and a
woman's renewed prioritization of her own needs.
[36] On the surface these goals of prioritizing women's
needs seem laudatory -- even feminist -- objectives, in line with several
ground-breaking books, including Gloria Steinem's Revolution From Within
or bell hooks' Sisters of the Yam, which argue for the central role of
self-esteem in female empowerment, cultural consciousness raising, spiritual
recovery, and collective self-healing. hooks, in particular, writes of the
importance of a community of faith that fuels spiritual solidarities and
feminist empowerment. In response to the many critics of the show, Galán has
asserted, "I never intended to make a show that was anti-women. On the
contrary, it was designed to be a show that gave women a break and gave them
all the possibilities and all the options to jump start their lives" ("Swan
Creator"). The Swan's approach to female empowerment, however,
flattens psychological issues into one-dimensional heterosexual relationship
problems. In most cases, women must learn to surrender their anger so that
they might move forward, though "forward" articulates as an abstraction
designating both the potential beauty pageant and a future idealized
heteronormative life.
[37] To gain greater confidence in choosing men, for
example, Belinda finds that she merely needs to tape pictures of former
boyfriends to a punching bag and pound them several times. To overcome her
trust issues, Sylvia role-plays a conversation with her father in which she
tearfully says she never felt his love. The Swan's experts note that
Sylvia will have to submit to the discipline of the Swan program "before she
can move on," clearly indicating that in this case "letting go" becomes another
form of surrender required for progress. Even if we dismiss the disputed
validity of Ianni's credentials, the homogenized one-size-fits all therapy that
each Swan contestant receives seems de-personalizing at best and unethical at
worst, since it cannot and does not account for difference. Though Ianni told USA
Today, "It's not about exploiting anybody – inside or out" (Oldenberg
3D), it's hard to watch the
psychological work being done on The Swan with its relentless focus on
romance and its complete disregard of more systemic impediments to self-esteem
and not believe that the show is grounded in a heterosexist belief that a
woman's greatest sense of self comes as a consequence of her relationship with
a man.
[38] Similarly, as Helen Wood and Beverley Skeggs theorize
about narrative confessionals on reality TV more broadly, although therapeutic
moments on The Swan offer an affirmation and articulation of
middles-class restraint, rationality, and verbal proficiency, these moments
allow no space for the class and race-based causes of low self-esteem or needs
for collective empowerment. Steinem, for example, recognized that her sense of
personhood was highly inflected through an internalized class and gender-based
perception of "society's unserious estimate of all that was female"
(25). She recognized that her self-esteem was influenced by growing up among
"good people who were made to feel ungood by an economic class system
imposed from above" and that "sexual and racial caste systems are even deeper
and less in our control than class is" (21). The Swan can allow for no
such complexity. Indeed, by making reference to the psyche and then minimizing
its complicated constitution -- including vestiges of gender, social class, and
race -- The Swan over-simplifies the therapeutic process, suggesting
that mental health or positive self-esteem is only a punching bag away. This
representation serves to cloud the power dynamics attached to The Swan,
since it claims the makeovers it performs create transcendent female
empowerment, but the root causes of women's dis-empowerment are never
systemically addressed.
Salvation as Pageantry: "But in
the end her sacrifice led to salvation"
[39] As we have
indicated, transcendence into gorgeous womanhood involves assimilation into a
beauty culture that overwrites other social identity locations. If man-like
blocky bodies, shameful shaving, impoverished neglect, or ethnic excess mark
the pre-madeover ugly ducklings as needing a makeover, the beauty pageants that
culminate each season offer proof of each woman's successful transformation
into beautiful swans. And here too the passage from before to after is
naturalized through discourses of the spiritual, as evidenced in Galán's naming
of the pageants as opportunities for "resurrection," where the winner is,
quite literally, crowned with glory (Wegenstein). The pageant, even more than
the stylized reveal moments at the end of each respective episode, offers the
visual evidence that, as the host says, "in the end her sacrifice led to
salvation." As we have noted, The Swan is particularly invested in
obliterating the ordinary by creating post-makeover women who signify ethnic
anonymity through an amalgamated middle and upper-class whiteness. Reveal
ceremonies at the end of each woman's respective episode offer high-drama
events where made-over Swan participants walk across the Swan mansion's marbled
floors, awaiting their first glimpse of themselves in a large ornate mirror.
Their full apotheosis, however, does not come in the "mirror moment," but in
the beauty pageant, thus suggesting that both female empowerment and spiritual
enlightenment reach their full expression in display.
[40] As madeover
subject Marnie walks down the runway in her negligee at the first Swan Pageant,
for instance, she claims the moment as rich in female empowerment, "This is the
true meaning of 'I am woman, hear me roar!'" As a lead-in to the swimsuit
competition, the host similarly informs the audience, "The real test of a
woman's confidence is how she looks in a bikini." In behind-the-scenes footage
during the second pageant, we see the swans laughing and playing with one
another, giggling as they prepare dance numbers, flirting with strangers on the
street as they are driven around Los Angeles in an open-air bus. As so
depicted, the pageant phase enables women to claim a homosocial sisterhood seemingly
free of race and class difference. This community is unavailable to them in
either their ugly duckling misery or their interstitial experiences of pain and
suffering. Intercut interviews showcase women tearfully grateful for their new
sisterly community and inner peace. We see, then, that the language and
purported goals of a second-wave feminism are here fused with spiritual
well-being, the amalgam used to affirm both the outcome of the makeover and the
pageant itself.
[41] Historically,
the female body made vulnerable through hyper-visuality is yet one more arena
where class and race privilege collude to code a white elite image as glamorous
or sexy and an ethnic, raced, and working-class appearance as trashy or
suggestive. Taken as such, the pageant has the potential to underscore women's
objectification through the hyper-sexualization of their bodies on display.
Although we do not dispute that sexual confidence affords a significant form of
currency, particularly as Holliday and Taylor note in a postfeminist rendering
of female power as highly sexualized and playful, we resist the idea laid out
here that a sexualized visibility is the only viable means of attaining female
power. The pageant puts female bodies in public competition with one another
and quantifies their "beauty, poise, and overall transformation" through
external signifiers such as "high-fashion" photo shoots and run-way walks in
bikinis and lingerie.
[42] Yet, Swan
participants do not voice feelings of misogynistic victimization. Instead,
they speak of the confidence, new opportunities, and spiritual balance that
accrue to them as a result of their makeover and pageant experiences. Though
we must be reminded that participant statements are carefully edited to emit
producer objectives, it does seem, given the desire women have to participate
in The Swan as evidenced by its more than 500,000 applications, we might
be able to stake out some place where pageants function, in Sarah
Banet-Weiser's words, as a "feminist space where female identity is constructed
by negotiating the contradictions of being socially constituted as 'just' a
body while simultaneously producing oneself as an active thinking subject,
indeed, a decidedly 'liberal subject'" (The Most 24). For Galán,
the pageant quite clearly participates in the making of not only the liberal
subject but the transcendent female soul. She considers The Swan's
pageant a democratized event that celebrates women, precisely due to The
Swan's showcasing of plastic beauty (for more on cosmetic surgery and
beauty pageant competition globally, see Simoneta, Runkle, and Harney. For
general discussion on ethnicity, race, globalization, and pageants, see Craig Ain't
I, Cohen, Wilk, and Stoeltje, Barnes, Oza, and Parameswaran). "[W]hen I
see a normal pageant like Miss USA," she told People, "it is
demoralizing because I cannot aspire to that since I was not born beautiful.
If I see Miss USA, I'm a short girl, I don't feel happy watching that. If I
watch The Swan and I am
overweight and feeling like the pits, I am inspired because anyone can be the
Swan" (Green and Lipton 60). Accordingly, The Swan purportedly offers
egalitarian possibilities for ordinary and tormented women from all social
locations to be "part of the flock." The message is that all women can find
hope, renewal, and redemption by adopting The Swan's gospels of bodily
recovery and surgical maintenance. If the vestiges of race and class alter in
search of such redemption, then so be it.
[43] In this
domain of the pageant, the sign of the unmarked body becomes the single
signifier of achievement and the primary means through which to achieve
salvation. In many ways, the importance of the body in The Swan
contests the divide that Banet-Weiser has identified in the Miss America
pageant between subject-defining elements, like interviews and talent displays
that produce the woman as an "active thinking, subject," and those other
elements, like the swimsuit competition, that operate as "simple showcases for
displaying objectified bodies" and mark a woman as being "just a body" (24).
On The Swan, though there is a clear valorization of improved
interiority that registers as good self-esteem, there is no reference point
outside the body. Indeed, it is through the very act of fixating on the body
that one discovers how to transcend it. Enhancement of the body frees the
pageant participants to aspire not only to fashion modeling but also to role
modeling. Gina B., for example, assures the pageant judges that throughout the
Swan program she has struggled, surrendered, and found peace. She now realizes,
"I deserve time and energy to become the best woman inside and outside. I'm
worthy of attention. I am not selfish but helping myself to a more productive
life and it will allow me to inspire women to embrace the swan deep inside them
so they can spread their wings and fly."
[44] Much like the
religious convert, contestants believe their journeys of healing and
affirmation will inspire others to choose medical surrender, redemption, and
rebirth. Swan hopefuls have been granted the confidence to be visible, to have
faith in one's body, to be seen by public and private eyes without fear of
censure. The body in this regard functions as the locus and limit of
salvation, there being no place where the Swan is not "just a body" since a
new-found inner peace requires full focus on and transformation of the body in
order to access internal strength. As such, The Swan functions as a
compelling mediated site where the exigencies of the mind/body split are
rectified. Both Susan Bordo and Elizabeth Grosz, among others, have done much
to problematize the mind/body duality that positions, in Grosz's words,
"subjectivity and personhood with the conceptual side of the opposition while
relegating the body to the status of an object, outside of and distinct from
consciousness" (4). Pippa Brush has observed in relation to Grosz that,
"articulating the body as plastic and malleable," as is the case in plastic
surgery and makeover discourses, "makes the body seem more like an object than
the location of self" (26). As Grosz elucidates, such regard for the body
potentially duplicates a "mind/body dualism" by "taking the body as a kind of
natural bedrock on which psychological and sociological analyses may be added
as cultural overlays" (144). Though popular culture can often reinforce
mind/body divisions, The Swan requires mediation of the body to achieve
subjectivity and empowered femininity. It is only through the shame and
suffering of the body, that a woman can achieve what The Swan posits as
spiritual riches made manifest in material form: inner peace expressed through
the beautiful body. Such embodied resplendence, in turn, allows the
ugly-duckling-turned-Swan to transcend to a celebrated sphere where
working-class and/or ethnic excess have been transubstantiated into gorgeous
womanhood.
"[T]he goal is to be
comfortable in your own skin, whatever it takes . . . "
[45] Classic film
theory posits the woman as the object of the gaze, who in her spectacular
to-be-looked-at-ness passively receives the active and affirming gaze of the
looker, always coded male (Mulvey "Visual," Berger). Many theorists have
problematized this dynamic (Mulvey "Afterthoughts"), in particular seeking to
account for male to-be-looked-at-ness (Neale) or female gazing (Gamman) or a
queer-butch gaze (Halberstam). Kibbey offers a theory of the gaze that we see
manifested in The Swan, since she suggests that the power of image and
the woman's incarnation through image-ness "paradoxically ha[s] the power to
ideologically displace the material means of the production of images to
herself as object" (40-41). In this respect, women potentially possess "a
controlling power as the source of images" (41). Similarly, on The Swan
the made-over body functions as a feminized object converted into a site of
agency that is ratified by the power to command the gaze. Though The Swan
does not eschew the gaze in and of itself, the economy of looking that it
establishes disrupts active/passive positions between the masculinized gazer
and the feminized gazed-at, suggesting that the gaze can be earned and
controlled. This, in turn, allows the made-over woman to control the gaze
through the power of her visuality, a form of empowerment that, it suggests,
reinforces legitimacy as both a soul and a self.
[46] The Swan's
success in making this claim for an empowered to-be-looked-at-ness relies on
both spiritual and secular tropes that mutually posit the shame and suffering
of the body as necessary precursors to a form of transcendence that is tethered
to inner peace and articulated through the worldly currencies of image and
attractiveness. The entanglements for class, ethnicity, and race in The
Swan's narrative of shame,
surrender, and salvation mark this makeover/pageant reality TV show as a
complicated cultural text that has been called by its creator "very loving to
woman," its participants "the place of my heart and soul," and its critics
"exploitive and misogynistic." Like many religious systems, The Swan
requires that its participants be fully abject in order to be saved by the
regime it offers. Since a tacit ticket for entry into the Swan program is both
femaleness and a compromised sense of self, and since this lack of ego strength
is predicated on an absence of beauty signification, the entire process is
distinctly skewed to create a "normalized" version of femininity where race,
class, and ethnicity function as secondary details. Altering each woman's
sense of her own appearance provides the antidote to her disempowerment; yet,
empowerment requires that makeover subjects surrender their resistance, their
autonomy, and their bodies to the Swan's dream team.
[47] Nowhere is
this more evident than in the spiritual threads woven throughout the Swan
program and pageant. The reward for admitting one's shame and perfect
surrender is moving from program to pageant to media star where becoming a
celebrated image coded with elite whiteness functions as a form of spectatorial
salvation. This, suggests Galán, is what The Swan offers: being
comfortable in one's own skin, feeling confident in one's body, being the
center of attention. As she puts it, her message is:
[F]or all of us,
particularly women . . . to find ourselves comfortable in our own skin. I
think that what I intended to say with The Swan is not that you should
change yourself and not like yourself and be someone else, but rather that when
you hit a roadblock . . . that you look for those answers. Because the goal is
to be comfortable in your own skin, whatever it takes, inside and out.
(Wegenstein)
Since as we have noted, The Swan,
in both program and ideology, pathologizes before-transformation diversity, it
similarly camouflages the bumps and bulges, the pockmarks and deviations, that
signify not only excess but failure to evoke an idealized raced and classed
norm. Galán's call for comfort in one's own skin therefore requires that one
move out of the specificity of that skin, leaving the particularities of
heritage and experience behind. Though The Swan may offer woman a
meaningful form of cultural capital, confining female power to surgically
constructed bodies that have been de-cellulited, hyper-glamorized, and
de-racinated creates a consequent ideal in which ethnic, classed, and average
bodies are de-legitimated. It heightens a notion of shame-based isolation,
that, as Bartky notes, can be "profoundly disempowering" (237) and turns away
from a politics that is mindful of power relations and the need for connection,
engagement, and community solidarities. The emphasis on individual salvation,
though consistent with American valorization of autonomy, reaffirms a
problematic politics in its insistence that projects of the self will
circumvent structures of inequality, eliminating the need for collective
action.
[48] In so doing, The
Swan relies on the legitimating rhetoric of spiritual transformation to
naturalize its makeover processes. The Swan gospels teach that there is
empowerment, relief from censure, and transcendence in surrendering to radical
transformation. Through it all, the body functions as the proof of one's
overall well-being. Women seeking salvation through the Swan curriculum can
therefore expect not resurrection of the body but resurrection to a body. It
is an idealized form only salient through representation, constructed and made
intelligible through refined skin and bone -- the flesh made image. The
Swan's contestants are represented as achieving confidence and healing, as
well as "comfort in their own skin." If the soul is at stake, as The Swan
so powerfully argues, and if bereft of her image, a "woman faces [semiotic]
extinction," as Kibbey theorizes (45), a therapeutic salvation gospel of shame,
surrender, and salvation might to many women be, quite literally, irresistible.
[49] Given the
appeal of both its metaphorical and material messages and given both The
Swan and Nely Galán's seeming perpetual presence in the contemporary
mediascape, this makeover/beauty reality TV program strikes us as a signature
text, which illuminates the vexing tensions that arise between identity and
ideology. It is a powerful contributor to other media and cultural texts that
work to redefine and make accessible concepts of the worthy self. Though its
complicated rhetorics about race and class mark The Swan as deeply
problematic, these same discourses valorize and lay claim to a form of female
empowerment that offers women specific cultural currency made manifest through
the symbolic and material nature of the body.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank
Dwight Billings, Greg Waller, Radhika Parameswaran, Katie Lofton, and the
anonymous readers, all of whom offered invaluable feedback. We also thank
Bernadette Wegenstein for so kindly offering us interview footage.
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Contributor’s Note:
BRENDA R. WEBER is an assistant professor in Gender Studies
at Indiana University and author of Makeover TV: Selfhood, Citizenship, and Celebrity (Duke University Press, 2009); KAREN W. TICE is an associate
professor at the University of Kentucky where she teaches gender studies and
education. She is the author of Tales of Wayward Girls and Immoral Women:
Case Records and the Professionalization of Social Work (University of
Illinois Press, 1998) and is completing a book on campus beauty pageantry.
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Copyright
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Ann Kibbey.
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