Friday, August 2, 2019
The Primacy of Poetry: On Tita Chicoââ¬â¢s The Arts of Beauty: Womenââ¬â¢s Cos
On Tita Chicoââ¬â¢s The Arts of Beauty: Womenââ¬â¢s Cosmetics and Popeââ¬â¢s Ekphrasis In ââ¬Å"The Arts of Beauty: Womenââ¬â¢s Cosmetics and Popeââ¬â¢s Ekphrasis,â⬠Tita Chico contends that ekphrastic representations of women in The Rape of the Lock and Epistle to a Lady indicate Popeââ¬â¢s privileging poetic artistry over the art of cosmetics. In both poems, Pope exploits the humiliation of a ââ¬Å"cosmetically constructed womanâ⬠in an effort to assert the supremacy of his own artistic authority (Chico 4). Chico uses other scholarsââ¬â¢Laura Brown, Christa Knellwolf, and Felicity Naussbaum chief among themââ¬â¢to anchor the origins of her argument, but she immediately addresses their respective limitations. She gently criticizes other scholars for privileging the purely social aspects of Rape, thereby neglecting the implications of Popeââ¬â¢s aesthetic form. Exploring poetic form with particular attention to ekphrastic representation and the mock-epic genre enables Chico to extrapolate social significance and assert that aesthetic c hoice signifies Popeââ¬â¢s concern regarding the inherent value of different arts. That is, Popeââ¬â¢s heavily ekphrastic method of female representation effectively demeans cosmetic artistry, while lionizing his art of the masterfully crafted poem. Pope sought to keep the art of beauty in checkââ¬âalleges Chicoââ¬âas the power of cosmetic beauty ââ¬Å"[threatened] to emasculate the viewerâ⬠(11). Chico offers a compelling evaluation of the relationship between Pope and his subject, particularly in her discussion of To a Lady, where the primacy of poetry over physical beauty is most evident. Rather than looking at female portraits, reading Popeââ¬â¢s poetry is the best way to seek ââ¬Å"truthâ⬠about women (18). Chico shrewdly asserts t... ...Chico reiterates in her conclusion that Pope scorned cosmetics on account of their capacity to grant women artistic agency and render them evermore beautiful. And, as Chico most successfully maintains, Pope repeatedly conveyed the limitations of physical splendorââ¬âartificial pretense and transience chief among themââ¬âwhile privileging the power of his own poetic capabilities. [1] Chico discusses the following works: John Gauden, seventeenth century author of A Discourse of Artificial Beauty and In Point of Conscience between Two Ladies, argued that cosmetics enabled women to display their piety and goodness; The Art of Beauty, a 1719 poem by J.B., borrows Belinda as a character and satirizes the utter fatuity of the cosmetic realm; Joseph Addison and Richard Steeleââ¬â¢s 1711 Spectator 11 chastises cosmetics and derisively labels these artificial women ââ¬Å"Pictsâ⬠(5).
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