Popular Culture Review Vol. 24, No. 1, Winter 2013 | Page 88

84 Populär Culture Review Jemima confesses that she buys glossy fashion magazines and then she says: “I sit and I study each glossy photograph for minutes at a time, drinking in the models’ long, lithe limbs, their tiny waists, their glowing golden skin. I have a routine: I Start with their faces, eyeing each sculpted cheekbone, heart-shaped chin, and I move slowly down their bodies, careful not to miss a muscle” (Green 1). When Jemima finally loses weight (for a man), the stylish Geraldine takes responsibility for giving her a makeover, and urges Jemima to use her credit card to buy designer clothes and get a great hairdo. After the makeover, Jemima and Geraldine walk down the town’s high Street as “two slim (slim!) blondes, laden down with fabulous goodies” (Green 174). In Western culture, fat people are visual embodiments of conspicuous consumption, fall guys of the ambivalence created by a society which actively encourages overconsumption, but punishes brutally when there are bodily signs of that overconsumption. While she is fat, Jemima does not spend any money on herseif (except for buying a lot of food), but as soon as she becomes thin, she overspends on designer clothes, expensive haircuts, and gym memberships. Geraldine urges her to treat herseif now that she is beautiful by subscribing to the consumerist thought process that all beautiful women should indulge themselves for having attained the golden bar of “beauty”.2 The underlying message seems to be that fat women should be punished for overconsumption, while thin women should be rewarded; visible signs of overconsumption in the latter case—Louis Vuitton and Prada bags—are approved of and not vilified. Jean Baudrillard comments on the implications of consumerism in Contemporary culture in The Consumer Society, and argues that womanly women are encouraged to gratify themselves in Order to better be able to enter as objects into the masculine competition (enjoy themselves in order to be more enjoyable). They never enter into direct competition (except with other women over men). If a woman is beautiful—that is to say, woman is a woman—she will be chosen. If a man is a man, he will choose his wife among other objects/signs (his car, his wife, his eau de toilette) (Baudrillard 97) These beauty treatments make women feel more confident about their place in the rat race to get the best man and the best job since the base criterion for success in any field is their beauty—physical appearance is the new BFOQ,3 a phenomenon which naturalises BDD in women. As mentioned earlier, one key feature of postfeminism is the constant self-surveillance women subject themselves to in order to fit the perfect, supermodel thin myth of Woman perpetuated by the mainstream media and patriarchal society in general and leads to women in general being victims of BDD. The idea of the self-as-product leads to a connected problem in chick lit: the rivalry among women. When women become seen as objects in a