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Ugly is unpleasant, ugly makes you

Ugly is unpleasant, ugly makes you want to look away, ugly is what we worry we are but know we aren’t. One can have a case of the uglies, make an ugly face, or feel beaten with the ugly stick. You can be an ugly duckling, an Ugly American, or descend from the Plug Uglies. If you are an ugli fruit, you are currently in season. It may be possible to be good, bad, and ugly, but an ugly woman just might not exist. One might work at the Ugly People Agency, or even Coyote Ugly—but only if you’re not, you know, ugly.

Part of what makes ugly such a potent word lies in its etymology. Stemming from old Norse uggligr, meaning “dreadful” or “fearful,” ugly implies the subject is beyond merely unattractive—she is to be feared. Beyond the plain woman, or the woman who is unremarkable, homely, nondescript, or simply not all that pretty, the ugly woman looks a fright. Given the medieval correlation of physical beauty and moral goodness, it’s no surprise that ugly to describe something unpleasant to look at took root simultaneously with its usage as “morally offensive.” The ugly woman frightens us not only because of her malformed features but because of her amorality. (This concept is illustrated by her repeat appearance in fairy tales—most of which were written in languages other than English and therefore outside of my scope here, though ugly surely is the best translation of the words used to describe the various witches and stepmothers that populated the fairy tales of yore.) Anne Boleyn was described as “ill-shaped and ugly” by an English Roman Catholic activist in an effort to discredit her rule of England, the idea being that anything resulting from the reign of a hideous woman wasn’t fit to stand.

Of course, the connection between ugliness and a lack of virtue isn’t necessarily restricted to the medieval days. The exact corollary may have faded; the association remained. An ugly woman might hide, but she’ll be found: “The Persians make an emblem of [the veil], to signify that many times...under very rich Cloths, hide a very Ugly Woman” (Duke of Holstein, 1669). She might be greedy: “Many an ugly woman has ruined her husband, and starved her trades-people, that she might have a larger drop to her necklace...Is the ugly woman less ugly with her diamonds than without them?” (The Wife and Woman’s Reward, 1835). The ugly woman has no talent: “No truly ugly woman ever yet wrote a truly beautiful poem the length of her little finger” (Noctes Ambrosianae, 1827). And just in case any of us missed the message, Sir Edward Sullivan—the original men’s rights activist—reminds us in his 1894 treatise Woman, the Predominant Partner, that “A woman is not necessarily virtuous because she’s ugly, or necessary reverse because she’s pretty,” though he does concede that “Of course beauty attracts temptation, and ugliness repels it.”

This repelling of temptation presents the flipside of the ugly-as-ambiguously evil trope: Ugliness, under the right circumstances, can be a virtue. “Ugliness is the guardian of women,” reads a Hebrew adage, a compliment to the Spanish saying “The ugliest is the best housewife.” (And even if she’s not the best housewife, never mind that; The Overland Monthly reminded us in 1911 that “A good deal may be forgiven to an ugly woman.”)

But nobody loves an ugly woman like a fellow with the blues: R&B, blues, bop, and soul all have tributes to the ugly woman, praising her as a more competent and trustworthy woman than the pretty darling who’ll run all over town. The most famous example is Jimmy Soul’s 1963 “If You Wanna Be Happy,” but he hardly invented the concept; the song itself was borrowed from calypso musician Roaring Lion’s 1934 ditty “Ugly Woman,” the refrain of which is “So from a logical point of view / Always love a woman uglier than you.” Don Covay tells us to “Get me an ugly woman / Nobody want but me / Get me an ugly woman / Ugly woman twice as sweet.” Indeed, perhaps it was her community’s treatment of the ugly woman that made “the ugliest woman in show business”—as Ma Rainey was referred to—simply respond “Bless you, darling,” when a vaudeville performer called “an ugly woman or a pretty monkey.”

The bluesmen might have been shocked to find that their beloved ugly women didn’t actually exist. “There never was, and it may be safely predicted that there never will be, on earth any such creature as an ugly woman,” wrote Irish journalist Charles J. Dunphie in 1876. “Nobody ever heard of such a phenomenon. To be a woman is to be beautiful.” When we see beauty as being intrinsic to womanhood, an ugly woman is indeed impossible: She “may more properly be called a Third Sex, than a Part of the Fair one” (Philip Stanhope, 1777). A 1904 edition of The Smart Set magazine: “If there were such a thing as an ugly woman—which I don’t believe at all...we’d let them frisk around a bit; but seeing that this is a man’s world, we’ve made it absolutely necessary for a pretty woman to behave herself.” Sammy Davis Jr. may have around when his contemporaries were wailing their “Ugly Woman Blues,” but he himself remained unconvinced of their existence: “Ain’t no such thing,” he said in an Ebony interview in 1980. “A woman may be ugly in our minds, but physically every woman is beautiful to me. And I’m a womanizer, man.”

Luckily, if an ugly woman does exist, it's not that hard for her to change: “There are no ugly women, only lazy ones,” makeup magnate Helena Rubinstein famously quipped. The vaguely protofeminist Young Ladies’ Mutual Improvement Associations of Zion agreed, concluding an 1889 argument against the restrictiveness of corsets with “An ugly woman is a blot in the face of creation, but no woman need be ugly if she will exercise properly, live intelligently, and dress correctly.” It was a nice turnbout from the sentiment of an earlier era—that ugly women shouldn’t even try. From Atlantic Monthly, 1859: “By flying in the face of fashion, a woman attracts attention to her person, which can be done with impunity only by the beautiful; but do you not see that an ugly woman, by conforming to fashion, obtains no advantage over other women, ugly or beautiful, who also conform to it?”

The word ugly has come up most often in my discussions with women as something they’re not. “I know I’m not ugly,” say some of us before going on to list our flaws, as though frightening small children is the worry we must work the hardest to banish from our psyche. There’s a sting about ugly that makes it difficult to even utter the word about a person: It’s a disqualifier, listing what we or others are not, instead of a description we’re eager to use. “There seems to be a taint of political incorrectness to using the words ‘ugly’ and ‘woman’ together, akin to using a racial or sexual slur,” writes Charlotte M. Wright in her 2006 book Plain and Ugly Janes: The Rise of the Ugly Woman in Contemporary American Fiction. That political incorrectness gave birth to the pool of “yo mama so ugly” jokes that are a staple of the dozens. Indeed, when Jet magazine printed a 1973 roundup of ugly jokes from standup comics—who make their trade in subverting political correctness—all but one used ugly women, not ugly men, as their target. The lone standout who used a man as her target? Moms Mabley, the only comedienne featured in the piece.

As long as ugly is one of the worst things you can say about a woman, we’re hesitant to use it on one another, even when the goal is to cut one another down. If it is used, it’s delivered with deliberate provocation—take celebrity gossip site The Superficial, which uses “Because you’re ugly” as its tagline. The inappropriate power of ugly hasn’t gone unnoticed by blogger Tatiana of Parisian Feline, who writes, “There is power in all things, including ugliness. Many people are terrified of being ugly, but if there’s power in exactly who you are, that includes being ugly too.” In questioning the hesitancy we have to use the word, she implies that we imbue both beauty and ugliness with more power than either might deserve. “Being ugly, and being willing to call myself that, is always tricky business. When you’re conditioned to believe that ugliness is bad and prettiness is good, well, most people will do anything to show you how ‘good’ you really are.” Indeed, ABC network was counting on that impulse when they debuted Ugly Betty in 2006. Betty is written as a smart, likable, sympathetic character: We’re meant to see her "goodness" and root for those who try to convince her that she's not ugly—and we ourselves aren't meant to really see her as ugly. (Surely a task made easier by casting the non-ugly America Ferrera in the titular role, though the character is coded as ugly through the glasses, the braces, and the Guadalajara poncho.)

Like most of the women I’ve talked with, I don’t think of myself as ugly—but that's hardly an act of affirmation, as ugliness isn’t what most of us fear. Ugly is a strong word, closer both in etymology and usage to grotesque than to ho-hum. That power just might make it preferable in certain ways to what we’re more likely to fear: not that we’re ugly, but that we’re not pretty enough. That preference is only theoretical, of course; I’m not about to wish for the face of a gargoyle merely to save myself the woes of my ruddy skin and sagging jawline. But I’m going to pay attention, albeit briefly, to Jean-Paul Sarte: “A truly ugly woman is arresting, discordant in the midst of dull, run-of-the-mill human faces.” For a moment that passage seems to offer solace to the ugly woman—yet even here, she can’t win. Indeed, he’s only paving the way for our modern equivalent of equating appearance with morality: “There is no doubt at all,” Sartre writes, “that she is unhappy.”
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丑是令人不快,丑的让你想看别处,丑是我们所担忧的我们也知道我们不是。一个可以有一例的丑八怪、 使一张丑陋的脸,或觉得用丑陋的棍子殴打。你可以是一个丑小鸭,丑陋的美国人,或插头恐龙的后裔。如果你是乌格里果,你是目前正处于季节。它可能是好的、 坏的和丑陋,但丑陋的女人只是可能不存在。其中一个可能工作在丑人机构,或甚至狼丑 — — 但只有当你不是,你知道,丑。一个有力的词使丑陋的部分原因在于其词源。源自古诺尔斯语 uggligr,意思"恐怖"或"恐惧,"丑意味着主体是超越只是不具吸引力 — — 她是让人害怕。除了长相平平的女人,或者是不起眼、 家常、 不伦不类,或根本就不是那么漂亮的女人,丑的女人看上去吓了一跳。给出了自然之美和道德的善的中世纪相关性,也就不足为奇丑来描述来看,令人不愉快的东西花了根同时其用法作为"在道义上攻势"。丑陋的女人吓得我们不只是因为她格式不正确的功能,而是因为她的遗言。(这一概念说明了她重复出现在童话故事 — — 其中大部分写英语以外的语言,因此超出我的范围在这里,虽然丑肯定是最佳的翻译的词用来描述各种的巫婆和继母填充的昔日的童话故事。)安妮 · 博林被形容为"形病又丑"通过努力抹黑她统治英国英语的罗马天主教活动家,观念是什么造成的可怕的女人的统治不适合站。当然,丑陋和缺乏美德之间的联系并不一定局限于中世纪的天。确切的推论可能已经凋谢了 ;这种关联依然。丑陋的女人可能会隐藏,但她会发现:"波斯人使会徽的面纱,来表示过多次......非常丰富的布料下,隐藏一个很丑的女人"(荷尔公爵,1669年)。她可能是贪婪:"很多丑陋的女人已经毁了她的丈夫,和饿死她的交易人,她可能患有一大滴到她的项链......是丑陋的女人少与她的钻石比没有他们的丑吗?"(妻子和女人的奖赏,1835年)。丑陋的女人有没有天赋:"没有真正丑陋的女人没有写了一首真正美丽的诗她的小指的长度"(Noctes Ambrosianae,1827年)。万一我们中的任何错过的消息,爱德华 · 沙利文先生 — — 原来男人维权 — — 提醒我们他 1894年伤寒论 》 的女人的主要合作伙伴,"一个女人是不一定良性因为她长得丑,或必要的改变,因为她很漂亮,"尽管他承认"当然美吸引的诱惑,和丑陋排斥它"。这个抵制诱惑提出的丑作为隐约邪恶的修辞的另一面: 丑陋,在合适的情况下,可以是一种美德。"丑是卫报 》 的妇女,"读希伯来语的这句格言,恭维西班牙语说"丑最好的家庭主妇。(和即使她并不是最好的家庭主妇,那没关系 ;陆上每月提醒我们在 1911 年"好的交易可能已经得到原谅的丑陋的女人。")但没有人喜欢丑陋的女人,像一个与蓝军的家伙: r&b,蓝调,国际收支平衡表,和所有的灵魂都献给丑陋的女人,称赞她个更称职和值得信赖的女人,比漂亮亲爱的会跑全城。最著名的例子是吉米的灵魂 1963年"如果你想要快乐,"但他很难发明的概念 ;这首歌本身借来的从卡里普索音乐家咆哮的狮子 1934年小曲"丑女人",其中不是"那么从逻辑的角度来看 / 总是爱一个女人比你还丑"。唐 Covay 告诉我们"让我丑陋的女人 / 没人想要但我 / 给我丑陋的女人 / 丑女人甜的两倍。"事实上,也许正是她的社区治疗的丑作"演艺界最丑的女人"的女人 — — 述马雷尼 — — 简单地回答"上帝保佑你,亲爱的"当一个杂耍表演者被称为"丑陋的女人或一只漂亮的猴子"。江湖可能会震惊地发现他们心爱的丑女人根本不存在。从来没有,可以安全地预测永远不会有,地球上任何这种动物作为一个丑陋的女人,"写道:"爱尔兰记者查尔斯 · J.Dunphie 于 1876 年。"没人听说过这种现象。要一个女人是要漂亮。当我们看到美丽作为固有的女大十八变时,丑陋的女人是不可能的: 她"可能更适当地被称为第三性别,而不是公平的一"(菲利普 • 斯坦霍普 1777年)。智能设置杂志 1904年版:"如果有这样的事是一个丑陋的女人 — — — 我不相信在所有......我们会让他们搜走几步 ;但既然这是一个男人的世界,我们已经做到绝对必要的一位漂亮的女子,要守规矩。Sammy Davis 小可能有周围,当他同时代的人嚎啕大哭他们"丑陋的女人蓝色",但他本人仍有怀疑它们的存在:"不是没有这种事,"他说,在黑檀木 1980 年采访。"一个女人可能是丑陋的在我们的心目中,但每个女人是美丽对我的身体。是个好色之徒,伙计。幸运的是,如果一个丑女人确实存在,它没有那么难的改变了她:"有没有丑女人,只有懒女人,"化妆品巨头赫莲娜曾嘲讽地说。含糊地锡安相互改进协会女权年轻女士同意,结论性 1889年反对限制性的胸衣与"丑陋的女人是一个污点在创作,但没有女人需要丑陋,如果她会正确行使、 智慧的生活,和穿着得体"。它是从一个更早的时代情绪好 turnbout — — 丑陋的女人甚至不应该尝试。从大西洋月刊,1859年:"飞在时尚,一个女人吸引注意到她的人,可以不受惩罚地只通过了美丽 ;但是你没有看到丑陋的女人,通过顺应时尚,获得任何条件优越过其他女人,丑陋的或美丽的也符合它吗?"丑字已拿出最经常在妇女作为东西与我讨论中他们不是。要列出我们的缺点前说"我知道我不丑,"我们有些人,就像可怕的小儿童是我们必须工作,最难打消我们的心灵令人担忧。那里是很难甚至说出这个字眼对一个人对丑的螫针: 它是舔,清单我们或其他人不,而不是说明我们热切期待着使用。"那里似乎是政治不正确使用词语 '丑' 和 '女人' 在一起的类似于使用种族或性别的诽谤,污点"写夏洛特 · 赖特在她 2006 年我国图书平原和丑陋简氏: 当代美国小说中的丑女人兴起。政治不正确催生的池"哟妈妈这么丑"是一种主食数十个的笑话。事实上,当射流杂志印 1973年草甘膦除草剂农达的丑陋的笑话从站立漫画 — — 谁让他们的贸易在颠覆政治上的正确性 — — 只有一位丑陋的女人,不丑男人,作为他们的目标。孤独的佼佼者一个人作为她的目标吗?妈妈 Mabley,推荐在片中唯一的女喜剧演员。只要丑是最糟糕的事情,你可以说一个女人之一,我们愿用它对另一个人,甚至当目标是另一个砍。如果使用它,它交付与蓄意挑衅 — — 拿名人八卦网站肤浅,它使用"因为你丑"作为品牌口号。丑的不适当权力并没有白费,由博客作者塔季扬娜的巴黎猫,写道,"有是所有的东西,包括丑陋的力量。很多人都害怕丑陋的东西,但如果是有力量的到底你是谁,包括过于丑陋。"在审问时我们必须使用这个词的犹豫,她暗示我们灌输这两种美和丑与更多的权力比也可能值得。"丑,而愿意称自己为,一直是件棘手的事情。当你受限的相信丑是坏和美貌是好的好吧,大多数人会做什么来告诉你如何 '好' 的时候你真的是。事实上,美国广播公司网络指望那种冲动时他们在 2006 年首次亮相丑女贝蒂 》。贝蒂写成一个聪明、 可爱,同情心的角色: 我们注定要见到她的"善"和根为那些试图说服她她不是丑 — — 和我们自己不会真的把她看作丑。(肯定任务变得容易了铸件中的名义上的作用,非丑美国蕾虽然字符被编码为丑通过眼镜、 大括号和瓜达拉哈拉雨披。)最喜欢的女人我进行了交谈,我不认为自己是丑 — — 那是很难的肯定,行为,丑就不是什么,但我们中的大多数都害怕。丑是一个有力的词,更接近的词源和怪诞比到平淡的使用情况。认为权力只可能使以特定方式对我们更有可能害怕更可取: 不是我们是丑陋的但我们不能不够漂亮。该首选项只是理论,当然 ;我不想渴望石像鬼的脸,只是为了节省自己的我的皮肤红润,下垂的下颌困境。但我要去注意,虽然简单地说,是向吉恩 Paul —:"真正丑陋的女人是逮捕、 不和谐在枯燥、 普通人类的面孔"。一会儿那段经文似乎向丑陋的女人提供慰藉 — — 然而,即使在这里,她不可能赢。事实上,他只为铺平相当于我们现代的外观等同于道德:"毫无疑问,"萨特写道,"她不高兴。
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Ugly is unpleasant, ugly makes you want to look away, ugly is what we worry we are but know we aren’t. One can have a case of the uglies, make an ugly face, or feel beaten with the ugly stick. You can be an ugly duckling, an Ugly American, or descend from the Plug Uglies. If you are an ugli fruit, you are currently in season. It may be possible to be good, bad, and ugly, but an ugly woman just might not exist. One might work at the Ugly People Agency, or even Coyote Ugly—but only if you’re not, you know, ugly.

Part of what makes ugly such a potent word lies in its etymology. Stemming from old Norse uggligr, meaning “dreadful” or “fearful,” ugly implies the subject is beyond merely unattractive—she is to be feared. Beyond the plain woman, or the woman who is unremarkable, homely, nondescript, or simply not all that pretty, the ugly woman looks a fright. Given the medieval correlation of physical beauty and moral goodness, it’s no surprise that ugly to describe something unpleasant to look at took root simultaneously with its usage as “morally offensive.” The ugly woman frightens us not only because of her malformed features but because of her amorality. (This concept is illustrated by her repeat appearance in fairy tales—most of which were written in languages other than English and therefore outside of my scope here, though ugly surely is the best translation of the words used to describe the various witches and stepmothers that populated the fairy tales of yore.) Anne Boleyn was described as “ill-shaped and ugly” by an English Roman Catholic activist in an effort to discredit her rule of England, the idea being that anything resulting from the reign of a hideous woman wasn’t fit to stand.

Of course, the connection between ugliness and a lack of virtue isn’t necessarily restricted to the medieval days. The exact corollary may have faded; the association remained. An ugly woman might hide, but she’ll be found: “The Persians make an emblem of [the veil], to signify that many times...under very rich Cloths, hide a very Ugly Woman” (Duke of Holstein, 1669). She might be greedy: “Many an ugly woman has ruined her husband, and starved her trades-people, that she might have a larger drop to her necklace...Is the ugly woman less ugly with her diamonds than without them?” (The Wife and Woman’s Reward, 1835). The ugly woman has no talent: “No truly ugly woman ever yet wrote a truly beautiful poem the length of her little finger” (Noctes Ambrosianae, 1827). And just in case any of us missed the message, Sir Edward Sullivan—the original men’s rights activist—reminds us in his 1894 treatise Woman, the Predominant Partner, that “A woman is not necessarily virtuous because she’s ugly, or necessary reverse because she’s pretty,” though he does concede that “Of course beauty attracts temptation, and ugliness repels it.”

This repelling of temptation presents the flipside of the ugly-as-ambiguously evil trope: Ugliness, under the right circumstances, can be a virtue. “Ugliness is the guardian of women,” reads a Hebrew adage, a compliment to the Spanish saying “The ugliest is the best housewife.” (And even if she’s not the best housewife, never mind that; The Overland Monthly reminded us in 1911 that “A good deal may be forgiven to an ugly woman.”)

But nobody loves an ugly woman like a fellow with the blues: R&B, blues, bop, and soul all have tributes to the ugly woman, praising her as a more competent and trustworthy woman than the pretty darling who’ll run all over town. The most famous example is Jimmy Soul’s 1963 “If You Wanna Be Happy,” but he hardly invented the concept; the song itself was borrowed from calypso musician Roaring Lion’s 1934 ditty “Ugly Woman,” the refrain of which is “So from a logical point of view / Always love a woman uglier than you.” Don Covay tells us to “Get me an ugly woman / Nobody want but me / Get me an ugly woman / Ugly woman twice as sweet.” Indeed, perhaps it was her community’s treatment of the ugly woman that made “the ugliest woman in show business”—as Ma Rainey was referred to—simply respond “Bless you, darling,” when a vaudeville performer called “an ugly woman or a pretty monkey.”

The bluesmen might have been shocked to find that their beloved ugly women didn’t actually exist. “There never was, and it may be safely predicted that there never will be, on earth any such creature as an ugly woman,” wrote Irish journalist Charles J. Dunphie in 1876. “Nobody ever heard of such a phenomenon. To be a woman is to be beautiful.” When we see beauty as being intrinsic to womanhood, an ugly woman is indeed impossible: She “may more properly be called a Third Sex, than a Part of the Fair one” (Philip Stanhope, 1777). A 1904 edition of The Smart Set magazine: “If there were such a thing as an ugly woman—which I don’t believe at all...we’d let them frisk around a bit; but seeing that this is a man’s world, we’ve made it absolutely necessary for a pretty woman to behave herself.” Sammy Davis Jr. may have around when his contemporaries were wailing their “Ugly Woman Blues,” but he himself remained unconvinced of their existence: “Ain’t no such thing,” he said in an Ebony interview in 1980. “A woman may be ugly in our minds, but physically every woman is beautiful to me. And I’m a womanizer, man.”

Luckily, if an ugly woman does exist, it's not that hard for her to change: “There are no ugly women, only lazy ones,” makeup magnate Helena Rubinstein famously quipped. The vaguely protofeminist Young Ladies’ Mutual Improvement Associations of Zion agreed, concluding an 1889 argument against the restrictiveness of corsets with “An ugly woman is a blot in the face of creation, but no woman need be ugly if she will exercise properly, live intelligently, and dress correctly.” It was a nice turnbout from the sentiment of an earlier era—that ugly women shouldn’t even try. From Atlantic Monthly, 1859: “By flying in the face of fashion, a woman attracts attention to her person, which can be done with impunity only by the beautiful; but do you not see that an ugly woman, by conforming to fashion, obtains no advantage over other women, ugly or beautiful, who also conform to it?”

The word ugly has come up most often in my discussions with women as something they’re not. “I know I’m not ugly,” say some of us before going on to list our flaws, as though frightening small children is the worry we must work the hardest to banish from our psyche. There’s a sting about ugly that makes it difficult to even utter the word about a person: It’s a disqualifier, listing what we or others are not, instead of a description we’re eager to use. “There seems to be a taint of political incorrectness to using the words ‘ugly’ and ‘woman’ together, akin to using a racial or sexual slur,” writes Charlotte M. Wright in her 2006 book Plain and Ugly Janes: The Rise of the Ugly Woman in Contemporary American Fiction. That political incorrectness gave birth to the pool of “yo mama so ugly” jokes that are a staple of the dozens. Indeed, when Jet magazine printed a 1973 roundup of ugly jokes from standup comics—who make their trade in subverting political correctness—all but one used ugly women, not ugly men, as their target. The lone standout who used a man as her target? Moms Mabley, the only comedienne featured in the piece.

As long as ugly is one of the worst things you can say about a woman, we’re hesitant to use it on one another, even when the goal is to cut one another down. If it is used, it’s delivered with deliberate provocation—take celebrity gossip site The Superficial, which uses “Because you’re ugly” as its tagline. The inappropriate power of ugly hasn’t gone unnoticed by blogger Tatiana of Parisian Feline, who writes, “There is power in all things, including ugliness. Many people are terrified of being ugly, but if there’s power in exactly who you are, that includes being ugly too.” In questioning the hesitancy we have to use the word, she implies that we imbue both beauty and ugliness with more power than either might deserve. “Being ugly, and being willing to call myself that, is always tricky business. When you’re conditioned to believe that ugliness is bad and prettiness is good, well, most people will do anything to show you how ‘good’ you really are.” Indeed, ABC network was counting on that impulse when they debuted Ugly Betty in 2006. Betty is written as a smart, likable, sympathetic character: We’re meant to see her "goodness" and root for those who try to convince her that she's not ugly—and we ourselves aren't meant to really see her as ugly. (Surely a task made easier by casting the non-ugly America Ferrera in the titular role, though the character is coded as ugly through the glasses, the braces, and the Guadalajara poncho.)

Like most of the women I’ve talked with, I don’t think of myself as ugly—but that's hardly an act of affirmation, as ugliness isn’t what most of us fear. Ugly is a strong word, closer both in etymology and usage to grotesque than to ho-hum. That power just might make it preferable in certain ways to what we’re more likely to fear: not that we’re ugly, but that we’re not pretty enough. That preference is only theoretical, of course; I’m not about to wish for the face of a gargoyle merely to save myself the woes of my ruddy skin and sagging jawline. But I’m going to pay attention, albeit briefly, to Jean-Paul Sarte: “A truly ugly woman is arresting, discordant in the midst of dull, run-of-the-mill human faces.” For a moment that passage seems to offer solace to the ugly woman—yet even here, she can’t win. Indeed, he’s only paving the way for our modern equivalent of equating appearance with morality: “There is no doubt at all,” Sartre writes, “that she is unhappy.”
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丑陋是不愉快的,丑的让你想去看看了,丑是我们所担心的是我们知道我们是不是真的。但是你能有一个丑陋的情况下,使一个丑陋的脸,或觉得打丑杖。你可以是个丑小鸭,一个丑陋的美国人,或从插头丑。如果你是一个丑橘,你目前在季节。它可能是好的,坏的,丑陋的,但一个丑女人就不存在。一个人可能在丑人的代理工作,甚至狼丑但如果你不是,你知道,是什么让丑丑。这样一个强有力的词就在于它的词源

部分。来自斯堪的那维亚语uggligr,意思是“可怕的”或“可怕的,丑陋的主题是“意味着不仅仅是没有吸引力,她是可怕的。超越普通的女人,或女人是不起眼的,朴实的,普通的,或不是所有漂亮的,丑陋的女人看起来吓了一跳。给出了中世纪的相关物理之美和道德上的善,那就是丑陋来形容的东西看不顺眼了根的同时,其用法为“道德上的进攻没有惊喜。“丑陋的女人吓我们不仅因为她的畸形特征,而是因为她的不道德。(这一概念是由她重复出现在童话故事中大部分是写在英语以外的其他因此在我这里的语言说明的范围,尽管丑陋当然是用来描述各种女巫和继母,密集的昔日的童话的话最好的翻译。)安妮博林描述为“不形和丑陋”由英国罗马天主教活动家为了诋毁她的统治英格兰,想法是从一个可怕的女人是统治造成任何不适合的立场。

当然,丑陋和缺乏美德是之间的连接不一定局限于中世纪的天。精确的推论可能已经消失;协会仍然。一个丑女人可能隐藏,但她会发现:“波斯人做[面纱]徽章,意味着很多次……非常丰富的布下,隐藏一个非常丑陋的女人”(荷斯坦公爵,1669)。她可能是贪婪的:“许多丑陋的女人毁了她的丈夫,与她饿的交易人,她可能会有较大的下降到她的项链……是丑陋的女人不丑以她的钻石比没有他们?“(妻子和女人的奖励,1835)。丑陋的女人没有天赋:“没有真正的丑陋的女人还写了一个真正美丽的诗的长度她的小手指”(noctes ambrosianae,1827)。在任何情况下我们错过的消息,爱德华爵士沙利文原始人的人权活动家提醒我们在他的1894部的女人,主要合作伙伴,“一个女人不一定是善良的因为她丑,或必要的反向因为她长的很漂亮,虽然他也承认,“当然,美女诱惑,和丑陋

排斥它。”这种排斥诱惑了丑陋的一面为隐约邪恶的比喻:丑,在适当的情况下,可以是一种美德。“丑是女人的监护人,”读希伯来谚语,对西班牙说“最丑陋的是最好的家庭主妇赞美。”(即使她不是最好的家庭主妇,别介意;陆路月刊提醒我们在1911,“一个很好的协议可以原谅一个丑女人。”)

但没人喜欢像一个蓝色的家伙一个丑女人:R&B,蓝调,防喷器,和灵魂都献给了丑陋的女人,称赞她作为一个更称职的和可信赖的女人比谁跑得全城的漂亮宝贝。最著名的例子是吉米的灵魂的1963个“如果你想要快乐,”但他没有发明的概念;歌曲本身是从卡利普索音乐家咆哮的狮子的1934首“丑女人借的,“不为”从逻辑的观点看/永远爱一个女人比你的丑陋。“你卡维告诉我们,“给我一个丑女人/没有人想要但我/给我一个丑女人/丑陋的女人的两倍甜。”事实上,也许是最丑的女人,“表演”——Ma Rainey被称为简单地回答“祝福你,亲爱的丑陋的女人社区的处理,“当一个杂耍演员被称为“一个丑女人或一个漂亮的猴子。”

的蓝调可能已经找到自己心爱的女人并不存在震惊。“从来没有,它可以预测,将来也不会有,地球上任何生物的一个丑陋的女人,”爱尔兰记者查尔斯J.邓菲1876。“没有人听说过这样的现象。是一个女人是美丽的。“当我们看到美作为内在的女人,一个丑女人的确是不可能的:她可能更恰当地称为三分之一比性,公平的一部分”(菲利普Stanhope,1777)。1904版的时髦杂志:“如果有这样的事,作为一个丑女人,我根本不相信……我们会让他们搜一下;但看到,这是一个男人的世界,我们已经做出了一个漂亮的女人,为了表现自己是绝对必要的。“Sammy戴维斯Jr.可能在他的同时代人都悲叹他们的“丑女人蓝调,但他仍不相信他们的存在:“没这回事,”他在接受采访时说1980乌木。“一个女人可以在我们的脑海中是丑陋的,但实际上每一个女人都是美丽的对我。我是个好色之徒,的人。”

幸运的是,如果一个丑女人确实存在,它并不难,她改变:“没有丑陋的女人,只有懒女人,“化妆品巨头海伦娜鲁宾斯坦著名的讽刺。依稀protofeminist小姐们相互改善协会锡安的同意,”一个丑女人是在创造面对印迹达成1889反对的束衣的限制,但是没有女人需要丑陋,如果她将适当锻炼身体,智慧地生活,并正确着装。”这是一个从早期时代的感情很好的turnbout丑陋的女人不应该尝试。从大西洋月刊,1859:“在时尚的脸飞,一个女人吸引注意她的人,可以肆无忌惮的美丽;但你不知道一个丑女人,符合时尚,得到比其他妇女没有优势,丑陋或美丽,也符合了吗?“

丑字来了最常在我与女性的东西他们不。“我知道我不丑,说“我们中的一些人会列出我们的缺点之前,虽然可怕的小孩是担心我们必须努力使我们的心灵。有一种刺痛了丑,使得它很难甚至完全了解一个人的话:这是失格台词,列出我们或别人都没有,而不是一个描述我们渴望使用。“似乎有一个污点的政治不正确使用单词“丑陋”和“女人”在一起,类似于使用种族或性别歧视,写道:”夏洛特M.赖特在她的2006本书的平原和丑陋的简:在当代美国小说丑女人的崛起。政治不正确,催生了“哟妈妈这么说,是一个主要的几十个丑”的笑话池。事实上,当飞机杂志印刷1973草甘膦丑陋的笑话的单口喜剧演员谁使他们的贸易颠覆政治正确但用丑陋的女人,没有丑陋的人,因为他们的目标。谁用人是她的目标唯一的出色?妈妈马布利,唯一的女喜剧演员出现在片。

只要丑是一个你可以说一个女人的最坏的事情,我们犹豫使用它的一个,即使当目标是削减一个。如果使用,这是蓄意的挑衅采取交付与名人八卦网站的表面,采用“因为你丑”为口号。丑还不正当的权力没有注意到塔蒂亚娜的博客巴黎的猫,他写道,“所有的事物都有权力,包括丑。很多人都害怕被丑陋的,但如果有权力在你到底是谁,这包括丑也。”问我们要使用这个词的犹豫,她暗示我们把美与丑有更多的权力比应该。“丑,并愿意称呼自己,总是棘手的事。当你习惯于相信丑陋,好漂亮好,好的,大多数人会做任何事来告诉你你是多么的‘好’。”的确,ABC网络指望这些冲动当他们出道的丑女贝蒂2006。贝蒂是作为一个聪明的,可爱的,有同情心的角色:我们注定要看到她“善”对于那些试图说服她,她不丑,我们不想看到她丑陋的根。(当然,一个任务更容易铸造非丑陋的美国费雷拉主演,但字符编码为丑,透过玻璃,大括号,和瓜达拉哈拉的雨披。)

最喜欢和我交谈过的女人,我不认为自己是丑陋,但这几乎肯定的一种行为,如丑不是我们大多数人的恐惧。丑陋是一个强有力的词,在词源和使用更怪诞比哼。权力会使它在某些方面我们更容易恐惧更好:我们并不丑,但我们不够漂亮。当然,偏好只是理论,;我不想面对一个石像鬼仅仅为了救自己的皮肤红润的灾难和下垂的下巴。但我要注意,尽管是短暂的,让保罗sarte:“一个真正的丑陋的女人被逮捕,在平淡中不和谐的,普通的人类的脸。“一个时刻,通道似乎提供了安慰的丑陋的女人即使是在这里,她赢不了。事实上,他只是铺平了道路,为我国现代等值的外观与道德等同于:“毫无疑问,“萨特写道,“她是不幸的。”
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