i think that looks matter everywhere, and academi is no exception. Having having beauty definitely eases the way for for people to respond more favorably to me because of halo effect of beauty. I was coached by my adviser to dress in a fairly drab way before i got my job at boston university. Some make up is appropriate, but like, too much eye liner is considered sexual and inappropriate. Champagne, i don't like it. Am i wrong? Am i missing something? At a signallingho, much of your work as about signalling. Does she find beauty based biaces in academia, either posit negativeyewell or positiveyewell? That question's to...
Ashley Mears is a former fashion model turned academic sociologist, and her book Very Important People: Status and Beauty in the Global Party Circuit is one of Tyler’s favorites of the year. The book, the result of eighteen months of field research, describes how young women exchange “bodily capital” for free drinks and access to glamorous events, boosting the status of the big-spending men they accompany.
Ashley joined Tyler to discuss her book and experience as a model, including the economics of bottle service, which kinds of men seek the club experience (and which can’t get in), why Tyler is right to be suspicious of restaurants filled with beautiful women, why club music is so loud, the surprising reason party girls don’t want to be paid, what it’s like to be scouted, why fashion models don’t smile, the truths contained in Zoolander, how her own beauty and glamour have influenced her academic career, how Barbara Ehrenreich inspired her work, her unique tip for staying focused while writing, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video.
Recorded May 8th, 2020 Other ways to connect