Academic literature on the topic 'Beauty contestants in fiction'

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Journal articles on the topic "Beauty contestants in fiction"

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BILLINGS, SABRINA. "Speaking beauties: Linguistic posturing, language inequality, and the construction of a Tanzanian beauty queen." Language in Society 38, no. 5 (November 2009): 581–606. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047404509990443.

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ABSTRACTThis article considers language use in Tanzanian beauty pageants, where contestants’ onstage speech is the focus of explicit and implicit critique. In particular, contestants who speak English are far more likely to win than are their Swahili-speaking counterparts. But because English has limited circulation and is restricted to the educated elite, speaking English is, for most contestants, possible only through memorization. Local ideologies that give preference to purity over standardness mean that, while contestants’ speeches are often full of grammatical oddities, their linguistic posturing is typically well received. Yet once a contestant reaches the pinnacle of competition, expectations for language use rise, and once-successful contestants find themselves at a glass ceiling. Findings presented here point to the local and hierarchical nature of language ideologies, and to the need to account for the common practice in multilingual communities of successfully employing “incomplete” linguistic knowledge for indexical and referential effect. (Language ideology, multilingualism, Swahili, English, language purity, beauty pageants, education)*
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Janssen, Michel, and Sergio Pernice. "Sleeping Beauty on Monty Hall." Philosophies 5, no. 3 (August 13, 2020): 15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/philosophies5030015.

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Inspired by the Monty Hall Problem and a popular simple solution to it, we present a number of game-show puzzles that are analogous to the notorious Sleeping Beauty Problem (and variations on it), but much easier to solve. We replace the awakenings of Sleeping Beauty by contestants on a game show, like Monty Hall’s, and increase the number of awakenings/contestants in the same way that the number of doors in the Monty Hall Problem is increased to make it easier to see what the solution to the problem is. We show that these game-show proxies for the Sleeping Beauty Problem and variations on it can be solved through simple applications of Bayes’s theorem. This means that we will phrase our analysis in terms of credences or degrees of belief. We will also rephrase our analysis, however, in terms of relative frequencies. Overall, our paper is intended to showcase, in a simple yet non-trivial example, the efficacy of a tried-and-true strategy for addressing problems in philosophy of science, i.e., develop a simple model for the problem and vary its parameters. Given that the Sleeping Beauty Problem, much more so than the Monty Hall Problem, challenges the intuitions about probabilities of many when they first encounter it, the application of this strategy to this conundrum, we believe, is pedagogically useful.
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Thompson, S. H., and K. Hammond. "Beauty is as beauty does: Body image and self-esteem of pageant contestants." Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity 8, no. 3 (September 2003): 231–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf03325019.

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Berkman, Robert M. "One, Some, or None: Finding Beauty in Ambiguity." Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School 11, no. 7 (March 2006): 324–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.5951/mtms.11.7.0324.

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This is a scene from a fifth-grade mathematics class: Students are in pairs, chatting eagerly; some are making sketches, others are bending straws and rearranging them on the desk, and still others are scribbling a variety of words. After two minutes, I hit the bell and say, “Okay contestants, time to vote. Hands behind your backs!” The room is silent as arms pull away from the table. “Okay, choose!” I call out, and hands stretch forward. Some students curve their fingers to make an “O”; others point a thumb upward.
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Wonderlich, Anna L., Diann M. Ackard, and Judith B. Henderson. "Childhood Beauty Pageant Contestants: Associations with Adult Disordered Eating and Mental Health." Eating Disorders 13, no. 3 (May 2005): 291–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10640260590932896.

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Bumb, M. J. "Undressed for Success: Beauty Contestants and Exotic Dancers as Merchants of Morality." Journal of Popular Culture 41, no. 1 (February 2008): 164–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5931.2008.00497_4.x.

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Karashchuk, L. N., Ye N. Shalimova, and V. N. Goleva. "Features of volitional self-regulation and motivation in students participating in beauty and talent competitions." PERSONALITY IN A CHANGING WORLD: HEALTH, ADAPTATION, DEVELOPMENT 9, no. 2 (33) (June 30, 2021): 192–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.23888/humj20212192-199.

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Talent contests in modern society occupy a certain niche, they cause a diverse attitude in various social strata and have overgrown with a huge number of stereotypes. These stereotypes do not always correspond to reality. We wondered if the girls contestants could have any personality traits, in contrast to girls who had never participated and would not like to participate in such events and began to study the characteristics from the motivational and volitional sphere. We assumed that female contestants should be motivated to achieve success, due to their confidence in their external data and good volitional qualities. We consider these personality traits to be the most important for participation in a competitive event, because successful overcoming of obstacles, perseverance in achieving goals, striving for victory depend on the level of their development. The results of the study showed that the studied group has high volitional self-regulation. However, we cannot talk about the motivation for achieving success, since the subjects are inclined to motivate the avoidance of failures. In addition, we found that female students generally prefer interiorized success, i.e. one that is achieved through inner work, and not outside influence. Interestingly, beauty and talent contestants, more than their peers, prefer success as recognition, which may be due to their desire to win a prize, approval or title. The results of the study can be used as a justification for educational work at the university in the format of beauty and talent contests, as well as the characteristics of personal development and self-realization within the framework of these contests. It is possible to develop psychological techniques and methods for psychological support of girls participating in various competitions of a similar format.
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Balogun, Oluwakemi M., and Kimberly Kay Hoang. "Political Economy of Embodiment: Capitalizing on Globally Staged Bodies in Nigerian Beauty Pageants and Vietnamese Sex Work." Sociological Perspectives 61, no. 6 (September 6, 2018): 953–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0731121418797292.

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How do various stakeholders capitalize off of display workers’ bodies? This article uses a comparative-case approach to examine two different sites—beauty pageants in Nigeria and high-end sex workers in Vietnam—where women’s bodies are differentially staged with varying degrees of visibility. Theoretically, this article develops the concept of political economy of embodiment to account for a network of people onstage, backstage, and offstage who capitalize off displayed bodies in qualitatively different ways. Beauty pageants in Nigeria take place on highly visible national and global stages. Contestants’ bodies signal African beauty as being fashion-forward, which propels and integrates Nigeria into international arenas of diplomacy and trade. High-end sex workers in Vietnam work on a stage that is hidden from the general public yet open for a select group of Vietnam’s elites. Sex workers’ bodies are on display to project an ideal of Asian ascendancy in Vietnam’s market.
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Gelfant, Blanche H. "Beauty and Nightmare in Vietnam War Fiction." Prospects 30 (October 2005): 751–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361233300002258.

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“Hue is the most beautiful city in the world,” a Vietnamese woman tells Marine Lieutenant Kramer, a central character in Robert Roth's Vietnam War novel,Sand in the Wind. Published in 1973, five years after the sweeping Tet Offensive had reduced Hue to rubble,Sand in the Windset the city within a complex meditation upon beauty and its relation to human desire, history, the vagaries of chance, ephemerality of happiness, and ineluctability of loss. Though ambitious in intent,Sand in the Windhas not been widely acclaimed. Except for John Hellmann's close reading, it has usually been referred to passingly or overlooked. Thomas Myers dismissed it as a “sterile mural,” a static work fixed upon a wall. I prefer to think of it as “walking point” — an action Myers ascribed to Vietnam War fiction he endorsed for “cutting trails” (227). Like the pointman of a patrol who clears a path for others to follow, the Vietnam War novel, Myers argued, opened a way into tangled historic territory — the territory of war now inhabited by literature. I propose to enter this forbidding area throughSand in the Wind, for I believe that like the novels Myers lauded it too secures a way, a unique way, of engaging safely with the Vietnam War and the losses it entailed.The lives of an estimated 5,713 soldiers, American and Vietnamese, were lost in the battle at Hue, as were almost 3,000 civilian lives. That the “longest and bloodiest” battle of the Offensive took place in Hue during the festive days of Tet was particularly shocking, for Hue was commonly considered an open city, and Tet, the lunar New Year, a time of peace and renewal. Traditionally, Tet Nguyen Dan ushered in the new year with three days of festivity, days of respite during which communal bonds were strengthened. Family members and their relatives renewed the bond of blood by gathering together for an exchange of gifts and good wishes; ancestral bonds were renewed by visits to family graves. Rice farmers plowing their paddies renewed the bond between man and nature.
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Chung, Nogin. "Transforming a Beauty Pageant: Mrs. America Contest in the Palisades Amusement Park and Asbury Park, NJ." New Jersey History 126, no. 1 (October 26, 2011): 18–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.14713/njh.v126i1.1102.

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The paper examines the history and transformation of the Mrs. America Pageant that was first initiated as a part of the Palisades Amusement Park attractions and later moved to Asbury Park, NJ. It looks at how the idea of model motherhood was enacted in the contest for married women which had begun as a beauty contest emulating the Miss America Pageant. The contest which transformed itself into a "home-making Olympics" after the Second World War testing contestants' skills of cooking, baking, sewing, and even changing diapers in addition to judging their physical appearance truly reflected the social ideal for American women in the Cold War period. The paper assesses how the contest helped to consolidate the notion of the perfect housewife, implying that beauty and home economics went together, and contributed to the professionalization of women's work at home.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Beauty contestants in fiction"

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Bowers, Ebony. "Social Stereotyping and Self-Esteem of Miss America Pageant Contestants." ScholarWorks, 2016. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2791.

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Miss America Pageant contestants (MAPCs) have been negatively stereotyped socially for their perceived lack of intelligence and nonconformance to feminist gender stereotypes of women. Stereotypes could affect an individual's social psyche and establish stigma, which could prevent a group from achieving their full potential. Stereotypes could also result in women having mental health disorders, low self-esteem, a decrease in self-efficacy, body image dissatisfaction, and eating disorders. The problem this study addressed was that women who participate in the Miss America Organization (MAO) preliminary pageants risk social stigma for taking part in a seemingly nonfeminist activity. Intercultural communication research (ICR) was the theoretical framework utilized to understand the role of cultural stereotypes, prejudice in communication, and self-perception among MAPCs. The main research question examined how local preliminary MAPC's decide to participate in pageantry in relation to their beliefs about stereotypes of MAPCs. For this multiple case study, a sample of MAPCs (n =5) from a Southeastern state was recruited to participate in interviews and provided narrative data that was coded and analyzed for themes of stereotypes, self-esteem, and self-efficacy. The key findings from this study revealed that the participants believed that societal stereotypes of MAPCs still exist, but the stereotypes did not influence participants' self-esteem, self-efficacy, and their decisions to compete and represent their social platform. The results also revealed a need for societal education about MAO pageant system's mission. Positive social change can come from understanding the MAPC subculture to dispel societal stereotypes and through presenting MAPCs' goals as social change agents.
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Sebree, Adrien E. "Living Fairy Tales: Science Fiction and Fantasy's Visionary Retellings of "Beauty and the Beast"." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2011. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/204.

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This thesis explores how science fiction and fantasy retellings of the fairy tale "Beauty and the Beast" bring visionary insights to the fairy tale. Stories such as Tanith Lee's science fiction novella "Beauty" and Mercedes Lackey's fantasy novel The Fire Rose constitute living and developing incarnations of "Beauty and the Beast." To better explore the visionary leaps made by these stories, they are placed in contrast with one of the original recordings of the story by Madame Marie Le Prince de Beaumont and the 1991 Disney film version, Beauty and the Beast.
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Hart, Carina. "Fruit, water, ice, glass, gold : images of human beauty in post-1980 Anglophone fiction." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 2012. https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/42414/.

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The 1960s and 1970s witnessed a critique of the concept of beauty in art and philosophy (McGann 190), with Christopher Janaway characterising aesthetics as the Cinderella of philosophy who “doesn’t make it to the ball” (vii). However, since around 1980 an increasing number of artistic and critical voices have begun to speak about beauty once again. Anglophone novels of this period, from 1980 to 2012, show a particular engagement with the subject through their exploration of human beauty. By figuring the beauty of characters in metaphorical terms, they demonstrate that conceptions of human beauty as either a sinful, fleshly temptation or an abstract ideal can be transformed. Five specific metaphors through which this is achieved form the subject of analysis for this thesis: fruit, water, ice, glass and gold. Ten post-1980 novels are examined in their use of these metaphors to reformulate human beauty. ! The preoccupation with the transformation and rewriting of beauty will be shown to indicate a distinct trend in post-1980 fiction, one which enacts a notable move away from fiction regarded as postmodernist. It will be demonstrated that the present concern with beauty emerges from the emphasis on surfaces in postmodernist fiction (Waugh, Practising Postmodernism 4), but that contemporary novels are characterised by a reconstructive and transformative approach which is less evident in earlier fiction. This transformative approach is directed to the division of beauty into concrete and abstract by philosophers such as Plato, Augustine, Kant and Adorno. In post-1980 fiction and the critical work of Wendy Steiner, Denis Donoghue, James Kirwan and others, this dichotomy is profoundly challenged. This thesis engages with these aesthetic philosophies in close readings of the ten chosen novels, to expound how the relationship between concrete and abstract human beauty is represented and rewritten in post-1980 fiction.
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Pantelia, Maria. "Beauty unblamed : a study on ancient portrayals of Helen of Troy /." The Ohio State University, 1987. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1487332636477321.

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Senguttuvan, Vinoad. "Shutters." Scholarly Repository, 2011. http://scholarlyrepository.miami.edu/oa_theses/290.

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Shutters is a fragmented novel that employs various prose and poetic elements to document the life and endeavors of photographer-writer Ishi in present day New York City. The work follows his quest for emotional and physical connection, and his artistic project where he photographs and writes about suicide survivors. The work explores the observer-observed divide that often manifests in fiction and addresses the themes of physical beauty, art, death and the human condition.
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Ullrich-Ferguson, Loretta N. "The beauty of her survival : being Black and female in Meridian, The salt eaters, Kindred, and The bluest eye /." View online, 2008. http://repository.eiu.edu/theses/docs/32211131464907.pdf.

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Li, Mengjun. "In the Name of A Love Story: Scholar-Beauty Novels and the Writing of Genre Fiction in Qing China (1644-1911)." The Ohio State University, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1406132481.

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Li, Mengjun. "Master of Heavenly Flowers Scripture: Constructing Tianhua zang zhuren's Three Personae as Publisher, Commentator, and Writer of Scholar-beauty Fiction." The Ohio State University, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1250608011.

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Klaber, Lara. "Taming the Perfect Beast: The Monster as Romantic Hero in Contemporary Fiction." Cleveland State University / OhioLINK, 2014. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=csu1408475965.

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Brown, Jeannette. "Little Town Blues." ScholarWorks@UNO, 2012. http://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/1582.

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"Little Town Blues" is a novel about a woman burdened by a childhood accident and surviver's guilt. She sneaks into a vacation house on Friday nights to read a novel. Bored with her marriage and her work as a hairdresser, her behavior becomes increasingly riskier.
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Books on the topic "Beauty contestants in fiction"

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Captive of love. Owerri, Nigeria: Cel-Bez Didactic Books, 2005.

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Miss Route 66. Chesterfield, Mo: BeachHouse Books, 2004.

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mistake, married by. Her so-called fiancé. Toronto: Harlequin, 2009.

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The queen of Sleepy Eye. Nashville, Tenn: B & H Pub., 2008.

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Simply irresistible. London: Little Black Dress, 2007.

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The diary of a rapist. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1988.

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The diary of a rapist. Hopewell, N.J: Ecco Press, 1995.

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S, Connell Evan. The diary of a rapist. New York: New York Review Books, 2004.

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Copyright Paperback Collection (Library of Congress), ed. Dirty little lies. New York, N.Y: Dell, 2004.

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Lane, Connie. Dirty little lies. New York, N.Y: Dell, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Beauty contestants in fiction"

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Sucher, Laurie. "In Search of Love and Beauty." In The Fiction of Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, 168–99. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-20239-3_9.

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Mallan, Kerry. "The Beauty Dilemma: Gendered Bodies and Aesthetic Judgement." In Gender Dilemmas in Children's Fiction, 59–92. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230244559_3.

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Hall, Alice. "Foreign Bodies: Disability and Beauty in the Works of Toni Morrison." In Disability and Modern Fiction, 49–91. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230355477_3.

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Hess, Linda M. "Gay Aging After AIDS: Andrew Holleran’s The Beauty of Men (1996)." In Queer Aging in North American Fiction, 123–45. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-03466-5_6.

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Jenkins, Jennifer L. "“Wonderful and Incomparable Beauty”: Adapting Period Aesthetic for The Importance of Being Earnest." In Screening Modern Irish Fiction and Drama, 103–20. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40928-3_6.

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Barker, Jesse. "No Place Like Home: Gabi Martínez’s Ático (Top-Floor Apartment) and Javier Calvo’s “Una Belleza Rusa” (A Russian Beauty)." In Affect and Belonging in Contemporary Spanish Fiction and Film, 27–60. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-58969-5_2.

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Ghosal, Nilanjana, and Srirupa Chatterjee. "Cultural Assimilation and the Politics of Beauty in Postwar American Fiction by Ethnic Women Writers." In The English Paradigm in India, 139–51. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-5332-0_10.

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Miller, Emma V. "“How Much Do You Want to Pay for This Beauty?”: Domestic Noir and the Active Turn in Feminist Crime Fiction." In Domestic Noir, 89–113. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69338-5_6.

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McGinn, Colin. "Beauty of Soul." In Ethics, Evil, and Fiction, 92–122. Oxford University Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/0198238770.003.0005.

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Tossounian, Cecilia. "Embodying the Nation." In La Joven Moderna in Interwar Argentina, 94–113. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683401162.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 turns to modern girls who were called to serve the nation through their beauty. Beauty contests, such as Miss Universe, functioned as an arena for debates about Argentina’s ideals of womanhood and its national identity. Beauty contestants embodied an ideal that valorized whiteness as it emerged from the intermingling of diverse “white European races,” and promoted a mollified version of the upper-class modern girl figure. At the same time, in forging images of argentinidad and representing a modern Argentine femininity, the winners of these contests embodied values of nationhood that symbolized the progress Argentina was achieving, as well as its potential among nations.
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Conference papers on the topic "Beauty contestants in fiction"

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Levy, Priel, David Sarne, and Igor Rochlin. "Contest Design with Uncertain Performance and Costly Participation." In Twenty-Sixth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2017/43.

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This paper studies the problem of designing contests for settings where a principal seeks to optimize the quality of the best performance obtained, and potential contestants only strategize about whether to participate in the contest, as participation incurs some cost. This type of contest can be mapped to various real-life settings (e.g., an audition, a beauty pageant, technology crowdsourcing). The paper provides a comparative game-theoretic based solution to two variants of the above underlying model: parallel and sequential contest, enabling a characterization of the equilibrium strategies in each. Special emphasis is placed on the case where the contestants are homogeneous which is often the case in real-life whenever the contestants are basically alike and their ranking in the contest is mostly influenced by some probabilistic factors (e.g., luck). Here, several (somehow counter-intuitive) properties of the equilibrium are proved, in particular for the sequential contest, leading to a comprehensive characterization of the principal preference between the two.
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Zanzabela, Berdit. "An Analysis of Buzzers’ Role in the Personal Branding of Puteri Indonesia Contestants in Beauty Pageants." In International Post-Graduate Conference on Media and Communication. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0007329203430348.

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