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Claudia Liebelt, Istanbul Appearances: Beauty and the Making of Middle-Class Femininities in Urban Turkey. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2023, xiii + 321 pages.

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Claudia Liebelt, Istanbul Appearances: Beauty and the Making of Middle-Class Femininities in Urban Turkey. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2023, xiii + 321 pages.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 January 2024

Feyda Sayan-Cengiz*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science and International Relations, Manisa Celal Bayar University, Manisa, Turkey
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of New Perspectives on Turkey

What is the political relevance of beauty? How can we locate the debate on feminine appearance, sexuality, and morality in a context of rising conservatism and authoritarianism in Turkey? How do we relate the exponential growth of İstanbul’s beauty industry to this context? What do the efforts of beautification and self-fashioning tell us about the negotiations of belonging to İstanbul’s urban middle class? What do contested norms of “respectable femininity” show us about cultural hierarchies and urban/non-urban and Islamic/secular distinctions in contemporary Turkey?

These are among the intriguing questions that Claudia Liebelt’s book Istanbul Appearances: Beauty and the Making of Middle-Class Femininities in Urban Turkey addresses through an exhaustive ethnographic study on the market of beauty in İstanbul, which has been growing remarkably in the context of the global beauty “boom.” Previous decades have witnessed the publication of a plethora of studies that explore a “battle” over women’s bodies and appearances in Turkey against the background of fervent debates on modernization, Islamization, urbanization, and in the framework of social and political distinctions, particularly an Islamic/secular distinction. Liebelt’s book revisits this debate in the context of post-2011 Turkey, that is, an increasingly authoritarian political landscape, and an increasingly conservative gender climate immersed in neoliberal discourses on women and femininity. While doing that, the author constantly explores the broader tension between the conceptions of “beautification as self-discipline and self-surveillance” in a neoliberal, heteronormative, patriarchal setting versus “beautification as an expression of women’s desires and subjectivities.”

The book relies mainly on a multi-sited ethnography in İstanbul between 2011 and 2014, in districts that are widely claimed to be examples of secular and conservative neighborhoods. The author takes readers into the world of beautification and self-fashioning, introducing them to various sites ranging from clinics of plastic surgeons to beauty salons, hairdressers, and tattoo studios. The book is permeated with rich ethnographic insights, compelling in-depth descriptions, captivating narratives derived from participant observation, and a total of 110 ethnographic guideline interviews with the providers, consumers, and entrepreneurs of beauty services. The data is supplemented with media analysis and questionnaires distributed to the visitors of a beauty fair and students of makeup training courses in İstanbul.

This is a voluminous book, with seven chapters, excluding the introduction and the conclusion. Chapter 1 is about İstanbul’s emergence as a center of the global beauty market and a destination of cosmetic plastic surgery tourism. The author frames the growth of this market as a part of the city’s increasingly neoliberal landscape. Chapter 2 looks into the intricacies of beauty service work from the perspective of workers, and particularly focuses on the emotional labor they put in, as well as the changing social implications of such work from a lower-status, “less respectable” form of employment to a viable career option for women. Chapter 3 focuses on the contested meanings of beauty for urban women of different generations and social positionings. The chapter discusses how conservative service providers frame feminine beauty as cleanliness and self-discipline that a “proper” woman should pursue, not least to keep alive the sexuality in heterosexual marriage. Chapter 4 is about the medicalization of aging in relation to the growth of the beauty industry. The chapter delineates how aging is redefined as a medical “risk” that postmenopausal women are expected to manage and fight through self-surveillance and esthetic “upgrades.” Chapter 5 contributes to the debate on the standardization of bodily features through plastic surgery, with a focus on nose and breast reduction surgeries in Turkey. The author convincingly argues that both kinds of surgeries – problematically labeled as “ethnic plastic surgery” by medical professionals – are related to the effort to attain urban, middle-class looks, which some interlocutors refer to as a “normal” appearance. Chapter 6, “Becoming Prezentabl” is about gendered norms of appearance in the lives of female workers both in white-collar jobs and service-sector jobs. The word “prezentabl” in the chapter’s title alludes to a frequently expressed requirement in job adverts in Turkey, and it connotes a well-groomed appearance. The chapter argues that cultivating and presenting a professional identity as a “working woman” are attached to requirements of maintaining a prezentabl appearance. Drawing on the interlocutors’ narratives, the author demonstrates the tension between beauty work as a burden and as a way of gaining self-confidence in the competitive world of work. Last, but not the least, Chapter 7 delves into the debate on the Islamic/secular tension over women’s bodies playing out in the realm of beauty and beautification practices, and provides insight into the battle over changing norms of respectable middle-class femininity in the context of 2010s Turkey.

Within some of these chapters, there are also sections that shine separately and call for a special discussion. In Chapter 3, the section on “bridal beauty” delineates the intensive beautification process that women go through while preparing for their wedding. Liebelt shows us how the process of “being made into a bride” (p. 140) is symbolically charged with patriarchal meanings attached to women’s sexuality in marriage, and how some women experience a disturbing loss of control at beauty salons on the day of their wedding. In Chapter 7, a section on tattoo studios frames the surging interest in tattoos in Turkey as self-identified secular women’s “cultural bodily messages” (p. 263) of resistance against the grain of Turkey’s increasingly pro-Islamic and conservative gender climate. This section is remarkable as it vibrantly addresses the question of how self-fashioning of the body can figure as a subversive expression of subjectivity.

As the brief summary above shows, this is an ambitious book in terms of addressing several debates and covering several urban sites of self-fashioning in İstanbul. It is hard to overemphasize the meticulousness of the research and the depth and thickness of the ethnographic details and descriptions. The author’s self-reflexive accounts about her own positionality in the field as an “outsider” (not just because of nationality but also as she narrates herself as a less enthusiastic consumer of beauty services), and how she developed rapport with her interlocutors, add a layer of depth to the study.

Each chapter in the book stands on its own, leading the reader towards various debates on the intricacies of women’s beautification efforts, of the beauty market, of the location of beauty in a neoliberal labor market, etc. It is a challenge to maintain a coherent structure amidst such rich data that comes out of long ethnographic research. The book, with its several stories, narratives, as fascinating as these may be, sometimes loses track of the overarching arguments and questions that it promises to focus on. Chapter 1 entitled “Istanbul, the Beautifying City” is a case in point. This chapter sets out to elaborate on one of the central issues of the book: the relation between the development of Turkey’s beauty industry and neoliberal transformation processes that took place during the Justice and Development Party (AKP) era, particularly urban gentrification. Even though the author mentions the issue, she does not elaborate much on the relation between neoliberal gentrification, sharpening social inequalities in the urban space, and how the beauty market boom is located vis-a-vis such inequalities. The section within this chapter that explains in meticulous detail the media hypes over the plastic surgeries of Turkey’s celebrities is very interesting, but seems somewhat out of place as it does not quite connect to the central questions of the chapter.

Another weakness in the book concerns the limited focus on the experiences and viewpoints of Islamic and conservative consumers of beauty services. This problem is particularly visible in Chapter 7. While exploring pious self-fashioning, the author does not resort to narratives from Islamic and conservative clients of beauty services, but instead puts a large focus on the narratives of a male religious scholar, Nureddin Yıldız, and a family counselor, Sibel Üresin, notorious for the anti-feminist statements she makes in popular television shows and her support for legalizing polygamy. We learn at length about Üresin and Yıldız’s ideas and concerns about what the limits of self-fashioning “should be” for Muslim women. The author also discusses the beauty practices and preferences of conservative women through a young woman who works at a beauty salon owned by her mother in Fatih. However, we do not hear the voices of clients themselves, and keep wondering how they experience and narrate their own self-fashioning practices.

Notwithstanding these shortcomings, Istanbul Appearances is a valuable and timely contribution to the literature on the global beauty industry. The book is also essential reading for those working on cultural politics of gender in Turkey. In addition, students and scholars interested in the ethnographic method will find in Liebelt’s book a captivating, excellent example of fieldwork, diligently conducted and compellingly described.