首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Beauty Advantage Most of us have heard the story of Debrahlee Lorenzana, the 33-year-old Queens, N.Y., woman who sued Ci
The Beauty Advantage Most of us have heard the story of Debrahlee Lorenzana, the 33-year-old Queens, N.Y., woman who sued Ci
admin
2013-08-12
64
问题
The Beauty Advantage
Most of us have heard the story of Debrahlee Lorenzana, the 33-year-old Queens, N.Y., woman who sued Citibank last month, claiming that she was fired from her desk job for being "too hot." But for all the talk about this woman’s motives—and whether or not she was indeed fired for her looks—there’s one question nobody seems to want to ask: isn’t it possible Lorenzana’s looks got her the job in the first place?
Not all employers are that shallow—but it’s no secret we are a culture consumed by image. Economists have long recognized what’s been dubbed the "beauty premium"—the idea that pretty people, whatever their aspirations, tend to do better in, well, almost everything. Handsome men earn, on average, 5 percent more than their less-attractive counterparts(good-looking women earn 4 percent more); pretty people get more attention from teachers, bosses, and mentors; even babies stare longer at good-looking faces(and we stare longer at good-looking babies). A couple of decades ago, when the economy was thriving, we might have brushed off those statistics as superficial. But now, there’s a growing bundle of research to show that our bias against the unattractive—our "beauty bias,"—is more pervasive than ever. And when it comes to the workplace, it’s looks, not merit, that all too often rule.
Consider the following: over his career, a good-looking man will make some $250,000 more than his least-attractive counterpart, according to economist Daniel Hamermesh; 13 percent of women, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, say they’d consider cosmetic surgery if it made them more competitive at work. Both points are disturbing, certainly. But in the current economy, when employers have more hiring options than ever, looks, it seems, aren’t just important; they’re critical. Newsweek surveyed 202 corporate hiring managers, from human-resources staff to senior-level vice presidents, as well as 964 members of the public, only to confirm what no qualified(or unqualified)employee wants to admit: from hiring to office politics to promotions, even, looking good is no longer something we can dismiss as unimportant or vain.
Fifty-seven percent of hiring managers told Newsweek that qualified but unattractive candidates are likely to have a harder time landing a job, while more than half advised spending as much time and money on "making sure they look attractive" as on perfecting a resume. When it comes to women: 61 percent of managers said it would be an advantage for a woman to wear clothing showing off her figure at work. Asked to rank employee attributes in order of importance, meanwhile, managers placed looks above education: of nine character traits, it came in third, below experience and confidence but above "where a candidate went to school". Does that mean you should drop out of Harvard and invest in a nose job? Probably not. But a state school might be just as marketable. "This is the new reality of the job market," says one New York recruiter, who asked to have her name withheld because she advises job candidates for a living. "It’s better to be average and good-looking than brilliant and unattractive."
Beauty is linked to confidence; and it’s a combination of looks and confidence that we often equate with smarts. Perhaps there’s some evidence to that: if handsome kids get more attention from teachers, then, sure, maybe they do better in school and, ultimately, at work. But the more likely plot is what scientists dub the "halo effect"—that, like a pack of untrained puppies, we are captivated by beauty, blindly ascribing intelligent traits to go along with it.
There are various forces to blame for much of this, from an economy that allows pickiness to a plastic-surgery industry that encourages superficial notions of beauty. In reality, it’s a meeting point of cultural forces that has left us clutching, desperately, to an ever-evolving beauty ideal. Today’s young workers were reared on the kind of reality TV and pop culture that screams, again and again, that everything is a candidate for upgrade. We’ve watched bodies transformed on Extreme Makeover, faces taken apart and pieced back together on I Want a Famous Face. We compare ourselves with the airbrushed images in advertisements and magazines, and read surveys—that confirm our worst fears. We are a culture more sexualized than ever, with technology that’s made it easier than ever to "better" ourselves, warping our standards for what’s normal. Plastic surgery used to be for the rich and famous; today we’ve leveled the playing field with cheap stupid jobs, and outpatient procedures you can get on your lunch break. Where that leads us is running to stand still: taught that good looks are no longer a gift but a ceaseless pursuit.
Deborah Rhode, a Stanford law professor and author of The Beauty Bias, is herself an interesting case study. During her term as chair of the American Bar Association’s commission on working women, she was struck by how often the nation’s most powerful females were stranded in cab lines and late for meetings because, in heels, walking any distance was out of the question. These were working, powerful, leading women, she writes. Why did they insist on wearing heels? Sure, some women just like heels. But there is also the reality that however hard men have it—and, from an economic perspective, their "beauty premium" is higher, say economists—women will always face a double bind, expected to conform to the beauty standards of the day, yet simultaneously condemned for doing so. Recruiters may think women like Lorenzana can get ahead for showing off their looks, but 47 percent also believe it’s possible for a woman to be penalized for being "too good-looking." Whether or not any of it pays off, there’s something terribly wrong when 6-year-olds are using makeup, while their mothers spend the equivalent of a college education just keeping their faces intact. "All of this is happening against a background of more women in the workplace, in all kinds of jobs, striving toward wage equality," says Harvard psychologist Nancy Etcoff. "So we’re surprised—but we shouldn’t be—how this beauty curse continues to haunt us."
To add an extra layer of complexity, there’s the puzzling problem of aging in a culture where younger workers are more skillful, cheaper, and, well, nicer on the eyes. Eighty-four percent of managers told Newsweek they believe a qualified but visibly older candidate would make some employers hesitate, and while ageism affects men, too, it’s particularly tough for women. As Rhode puts it, silver hair and wrinkled brows may make aging men look "distinguished," but aging women risk marginalization or scorn for their efforts to pass as young. "This double standard," Rhode writes, "leaves women not only perpetually worried about their appearance—but also worried about worrying."
The quest for beauty may be a centuries-old charm, but in the present day the reality is ugly. Beauty has more influence than ever—not just over who we work with, but whether we work at all.
As the halo effect goes, we often mistakenly equate beauty with ______.
选项
A、Intelligence
B、Wealth
C、Success
D、Good performance
答案
A
解析
破折号后面的内容是对halo effect(光晕效应)的进一步解析:在一群未经训练的小狗中,我们容易被其长相所吸引,盲目地认为聪明的特性归功于长相。该句最后提到的it指的是beauty,由此判断答案为A。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/nX97777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
TheAmericanideaofrespectinghumanrightscamefromseveralsources.First,thecolonistshadbeen【B1】______oftheirrightsi
TheAmericanideaofrespectinghumanrightscamefromseveralsources.First,thecolonistshadbeen【B1】______oftheirrightsi
Languageshavebeenchangedthroughtheages.Iftwospeechvarietiesarenotmutuallyintelligible,thenthespeechvarieties
LanguageVarietiesLanguagesconstantlyundergochanges,resultinginthedevelopmentofdifferentvarietiesofthelanguage
Thepromisingideamentionedinthefirstparagraph_______.Accordingtothepassage,wirelessnetworkhasanadvantageoverth
Thispassagegivesageneraldescriptionoftheadvantagesanddisadvantagesofahybridauto-mobile.Oneoftheadvantagesof
Thispassagegivesageneraldescriptionoftheadvantagesanddisadvantagesofahybridauto-mobile.Inmostcases,whatwer
Thepromisingideamentionedinthefirstparagraph______.Accordingtothepassage,wirelessnetworkhasanadvantageoverth
万里长城是中华民族的象征,中国人的骄傲。长城全长6350多千米,是世界上规模最大的军事防御工程,被列为世界七大建筑奇迹之一。我国远在春秋战国时期就开始修筑长城,至今已有2700多年的历史,明代修筑的长城,至今也有600多年的历史了。现在保存的北京段长城是明
随机试题
AjuryinNorthernCaliforniahasfoundadoctorcausedelderabuse.Familythoughtthedoctordidnotgiveenoughpainmedicati
患者男性,67岁,慢性萎缩性胃炎病史30年,近半年出现不规律上腹痛,食欲差,消瘦,黑粪。查体:贫血貌,上腹压痛。该患者可能的诊断是
对变电所所址的选择,下面说法正确的是()。
2010年1月某自来水公司(一般纳税人)销售自来水,取得销售额价税合计100万元,当月向独立的水厂购进自来水取得专用发票,注明价款40万元,税额2.4万元,则当期应纳增值税为()万元。
甲公司向乙公司订购设备一套。根据合同约定,2018年4月1日,甲公司签发一张以乙公司为收款人、金额为100万元的银行承兑汇票,承兑人为A银行,到期日为2018年7月1日。2018年4月4日,乙公司持有甲公司签发的银行承兑汇票不慎丢失,后被离职员工王某捡到
我国城市社区的推广普及阶段是()。
据对一批企业的调查显示,这些企业总经理的平均年龄是57岁,而在20年前,同样的这些企业的总经理的平均年龄大约是49岁。这说明,目前企业中总经理的年龄呈老化趋势。以下哪项,对题干的论证提出的质疑最为有力?
设随机变量X与Y相互独立同分布,其中P{X=i}=i=1,2,3令U=max(X,Y),V=min(X,Y).(Ⅰ)求(U,V)的联合分布;(Ⅱ)求P(U=V);(Ⅲ)判断U,V是否相互独立,若不相互独立,计算U,V的相关系数.
Salt,shellsormetalsarestillusedasmoneyinout-the-waypartsoftheworldtoday.Saltmayseemratherastrange【C1】___
带权为9,2,4,6的4个叶子结点构造一棵哈夫曼树,该树的带权路径长度为______。
最新回复
(
0
)