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Monday, February 25, 2019

Defining Beauty Through Lucy Grealy’s Autobiography of a Face

The Oxford Dictionary defines beauty as a combination of qualities, such as shape, color, or form , that pleases the aesthetical senses, especially the sight (beauty). In Autobiography of a Face, Lucy Grealy expands this translation by exploring her own interpretation of beauty through with(predicate)out the various stages of her life. As she examines life before her diagnosis, she mentions little to the highest degree beauty as a factor in her development. She was a tomboy par excellence, much concerned with play than lusting after David Cassidy (15).While Grealy is subjected to extensive surgeries and chemotherapy she continues to be unconcerned with appearances, though she was still keeping myself ignorant of the details of my appearance, of the specific logic of it (104). She was mindful of her looks from the taunts and teases of classmates, but remained intentionally unable to judge herself with the harsh eyes of post-pubescence. It wasnt until Grealy see her first Hallow een that she realized just what an impact her association of beauty had on her.Under the concealment of her Eskimo costume, she realized just how meek Id become, how self-conscious I was about my face until now that it was obscured (120). As time goes on, other people reckon to compensate for Grealys lack of concern with her odd appearance. Her mother purchases turtlenecks in an driveway to alleviate attention from the scar. As puberty reached her peers, she accepted that she would never agree a boyfriend, that no one would ever be interested in me in that way (159). Grealy accepted ideal of beauty, throughout her adolescence, concerns and the foe of what appearance she could hope to achieve. This is a feeling that can be echoed through the hallways of every high school across America, but strikes particular chord in Grealys psyche. It is not until reaching college that she feels fully comfortable in her external appearance. Sarah Lawrence was a campus where the students wer e wrapped up in asserting their own laissez faire and bizarre aesthetic, and Grealy thrived in this environment.Grealys personal definition of beauty cemented itself in individuality, as she grew unconcerned with the frivolous nature of the physical aspect of it. She concludes this beautifully by writing that society tells us again and again that we can more or less be ourselves by acting and looking like someone else, only to leave our original faces behind to turn into ghosts that will inevitably envy and haunt us. (222) Word count 414 Works Cited Grealy, Lucy. Autobiography of a Face. innovative York Perennial, 2003. Print. Beauty. Def. 1. Oxford Dictionary. 2012. Web.

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