ugliness
The Oxford Companion to the Body
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2001
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© The Oxford Companion to the Body 2001, originally published by Oxford University Press 2001. (Hide copyright information)
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ugliness The etymology of the word indicates what is at stake: ‘ugly’ is a Middle English (1150–1475) term meaning ‘frightful’ or ‘repulsive’, and is derived from the Old Norse term
uggligr. Uggligr is in turn formed by
uggr: fear or horror, and the suffix
-ligr: like. An ugly body is thus a physical body that induces horror in us. This element of fear is evident in the ugly bodies
par excellence: the monster, the grotesque body, and the
freak.
Ugliness is conventionally seen as the opposite of
beauty, but its modern use contrasts more directly to normalcy. Even though most of us cannot fulfil ideals of beauty, we can still be considered good-looking, pretty, or nice. If we were considered plain-looking or even unattractive, we would hardly be ugly, since we are still within the range of normalcy.
Normalcy as a concept and social standard arose in the early nineteenth century in Europe, and was linked to the development of statistics and the modern, administrative institutions of the state. Until the mid eighteenth century ‘normal’ meant ‘perpendicular’. By 1840 ‘normal’ had become current in the English language as indicating conformity to, and not deviance from, a standard or the usual. ‘Normality’ and ‘normalcy’ appeared respectively in 1849 and 1857.
The French statistician Adolphe Quetelet (1796–1847) contributed considerably to the concept of ‘the average man’, which he defined as ‘an individual who epitomized in himself, at a given time, all the qualities of the average man and who would represent at once all the greatness, beauty, and goodness of that being’. Deviations from the mean constituted, Quetelet observed, ugliness of the body, vice in morals, and sickness in regard to constitution.
An important reinterpretation of statistical distribution was made by Sir Francis Galton (1822–1911). Where Quetelet considered any deviation from the average an error, Galton saw this as mere difference from the mean. The total variation of these differences in the height of individuals in a population, for example, was defined as the normal distribution, also known as the ‘bell curve’. This way, extremes that Galton saw as positive — intelligence, tallness, fertility etc. — would not be judged as errors as they had been by Quetelet. Variation could be ranked.
The statistics founded by Galton and others enabled the rising state bureaucracies to compile inventories of their citizens' different characteristics and to assess the number of able-bodied persons available for the work force, military purposes, etc. Through the concept of the average and the ranking of the variations, the sound body of the population was defined, thus enabling the state to initiate policies that could further soundness and isolate incurably unsound elements — disabled persons,
criminals, demented persons — in suitable institutions.
The ugly body is thus a body whose difference from the normal body is turned into deviance. Ugliness can be seen as a kind of
stigma — a term originally used by the ancient Greeks for marks made on the bodies of person who were considered unusual, such as slaves and criminals. ‘Stigma’ is now also used medically to indicate visible evidence of a disease. Other kinds of stigma, not all resulting in typecasting a person as ugly, are: disability, membership of an ethnic group, and criminality.
Criteria for specifying which bodies are normal, maybe even beautiful, and not ugly, vary from society to society and over time. Should the body be symmetrical? Should the skin be smooth, scarred, or tattooed? Should the teeth be filed? Western societies celebrate the untouched, natural body, but at what point disfiguration becomes ugliness is uncertain. Is squinting ugly? Is a harelip, a person with eyes of two colours, a missing arm, an abnormal arm ugly? Among various peoples in Africa, scars forming patterns covering large parts of the body are basic to the beautiful body. Another criterion for beauty is found in how the body is cared for, and often concerns
health,
hygiene, or aesthetics. Is the skin to be oiled or to be painted or neither? How often should it be washed and with what (water, soap, disinfectant)? Should scents be applied? The extent and range of non-compliance necessary for a person to be considered not only not-beautiful, but also not-normal, and therefore ugly, varies.
In Euro-America, which for long has been dominated by the standards and culture of white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant males, a wide range of groups of people have over time been called ugly: for example aboriginal Australians, Africans, disabled persons, Hottentots, Jews, and wrinkled old women (significantly called ‘witches’).
A protest against the enforcement of normalcy can be found in the use by punk and other movements of ‘disfigurement’ of the body — for example by
tattooing which is extensive or in unusual places; piercing of eyebrows, tongues, and noses; and atypical hairstyling. These efforts can be seen as attempts to create an aesthetic of the ugly in protest against conventional standards of beauty.
Claus Bossen
Bibliography
Goffman, E. (1963). Stigma. Notes on the management of spoiled identity. Penguin Books, Harmondsworth.
Halprin, S. (1995). Look at my ugly face. Myths and musings on beauty and other perilous obsessions with women's appearance. Viking Penguin, New York.
See also
beauty;
body image;
body shape.
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Sejanus.(Theater review)
Magazine article from: Shakespeare Bulletin; 12/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; Sejanus Presented by the Royal Shakespeare Company...Paul Englishby. With William Houston (Sejanus), Barry Stanton (Tiberius), Peter...infighting. It was impossible to watch Sejanus without thinking of the earlier treatment...
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CULTURE: Houston's gunpowder plot; William Houston is the first RSC actor to play Ben Jonson's anti-hero, Aelius Sejanus. Terry Grimley met him during rehearsals.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 7/21/2005; 700+ words
; ...another title role, in Ben Jonson's Sejanus: His Fall, and we settle for a quick...Believe What You Will while rehearsing Sejanus. 'At the moment the characters are spilling...other. It's very difficult not to drag Sejanus on the stage at the moment and try ghim...
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Culture: A 400-year-old play for our times; Sejanus: His Fall Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 7/28/2005; 700+ words
; ...being closer to modern political theatre. Sejanus, the brilliant general who prospers under...Macbeth is presented as an aberration, Sejanus is merely a passing player in a weary...into a classical tragic anti-hero - Sejanus does not even appear for some time after...
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Live reviews: TIMELY REMINDER OF POWER GAMES; SEJANUS: HIS FALL The Swan Theatre, Stratford.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Sunday Mercury (Birmingham, England); 8/14/2005; 438 words
; Byline: EMILY ANDREWS SEJANUS is the latest offering of the Royal...it follows his devious side-kick Sejanus who murders anyone who stands in his...Jacobean time to the present day. When Sejanus says the way to advance Tiberius' rule...
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Review: SEJANUS: HIS FALL SWAN THEATRE, STRATFORD UPON AVON.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 7/27/2005; 394 words
; ...the hugely ambitious Roman commander Sejanus, killing, lusting and schmoozing his way to the top. The rise and fall of Sejanus brings some poignant messages on the...be a lesson to any fledgling MP. Sejanus continues until November
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Theatre: Still power-crazy after all these years Sejanus: His Fall Swan, Stratford-upon-Avon
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 7/31/2005; ; 638 words
; ...machinations and corruption. In many ways, Sejanus is a fascinating prequel to Camus' Caligula...and Jonson's savagely dark comedies as Sejanus' seduced partner in crime, Livia, cakes...into a cause for grief is jolting. Sejanus isn't as poetically soaring as Marlowe...
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Classic case of public interest; Virgil: His Life And Times. By Peter Levi (Duckworth, pounds 25). The Emperor Constantine. By Michael Grant (Phoenix, pounds 12.99). The Lydian Baker. By David Wishart (Sceptre, pounds 16.99). Sejanus. By David Wishart (Sceptre, pounds 6.99). Reviewed b y Stephen Harrison.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 11/28/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...be known of Constantine's sanguinary ascent to supreme power and his legacy. David Wishart is on much surer ground with Sejanus, now in paperback, and The Lydian Baker. These are the third and fourth respectively in the Marcus Corvinus series, Wishart...
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Web of deceit
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 8/6/2005; ; 700+ words
; Theatre 2 Web of deceit Sejanus: His Fall Swan Theatre, Stratford...James I's reign, Ben Jonson's Sejanus: His Fall seems to have gone more...that took off with Volpone (1606). Sejanus is generally rated a tragedy, but...
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The Rise and fall of New Labour's empire
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 7/4/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...s villa, that Peter Mandelson is awfully like Sejanus. What do you think?' I couldn't - she had...say, `Don't see it myself.' I said, `Sejanus?' thoughtfully. Sejanus, I may remark, for the benefit of any Spectator...
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Ancient & modern
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 5/24/1997; ; 530 words
; ...most famous example was Lucius Aelius Sejanus, captain of the Praetorian Guard under...The Roman historian Tacitus ascribes Sejanus' rise to power to a combination of long...intrigue and the gods' hatred of Rome. Sejanus, he tells us, was not of senatorial...
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Sejanus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Sejanus (Lucius Aelius Sejanus) , d. AD 31, Roman statesman; son of Sejus Strabo, Praetorian...Drusus. He obtained (AD 29) the arrest of Agrippina the Elder . Sejanus was put to death by Tiberius, who feared that he was plotting against...
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Sejanus His Fall
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Sejanus His Fall, a Roman tragedy by Jonson...Tacitus , the play deals with the rise of Sejanus during the reign of Tiberius, his destruction...Macro to spy on him. Tiberius denounces Sejanus in a letter to the senate, which condemns...
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Drusus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...17-AD 20). In AD 22 he was made tribune. Meanwhile, Sejanus, Tiberius' minister, had become jealous of Drusus' power...Tiberius against him. Drusus may have been poisoned by Sejanus or by his wife under Sejanus' influence.
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Tiberius
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...government and made himself extremely unpopular in Rome. For years Sejanus was his chief aid and confidant. Tiberius retired to Capri...correspondence. He grew suspicious of intrigues and in AD 31 had Sejanus killed. Modern historians have been inclined to treat his...
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Ben Jonson
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...this brief but heated skirmish, Jonson turned his energies to what he clearly regarded as one of his most important works, Sejanus His Fall, which eventually appeared in 1603. This rigidly classical tragedy was admired by some of Jonson's learned contemporaries...
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