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Paul R. Deslandes. The Culture of Male Beauty in Britain: From the First Photographs to David Beckham. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021. Pp. 432. $45.00 (cloth).

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Paul R. Deslandes. The Culture of Male Beauty in Britain: From the First Photographs to David Beckham. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2021. Pp. 432. $45.00 (cloth).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2023

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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the North American Conference on British Studies

In 1898, the Illustrated Police News adorned the front cover of one of its editions with a drawing, “A Lady Artist and Her Handsome Model.” In The Culture of Male Beauty in Britain: From the First Photographs to David Beckham, Paul R. Deslandes elegantly draws out the problematic implications of viewing the “exposed male body . . . as both a site of pleasure and peril” (122). Leaving aside the question of whether being “handsome” was essentially the same as being beautiful, Deslandes's key revelation is that this was not just an issue that concerned a scandalous minority, but an integral element of mainstream culture. Why is it then that academic study has focused on female beauty but relegated its male equivalent to the margins when this was not the case in much of popular and commercial culture? Perhaps homophobia—fear of seeming queer—has played a role in this, and Deslandes offers us a very welcome corrective.

His book, with a few exceptions, such as Henry Scott Tuke (who was an Edwardian painter of nude male youth), focuses not on elite practices such as art and modernist design, but on the visual culture of the mass media, particularly photographs and magazines. His argument is that the mass media was in service to capitalist enterprise. This meant that modern beauty was not just about aesthetic appreciation but also about improvement of the self. The reader is introduced to a wealth of fascinating material and some particularly wonderful illustrations. The journey is chronological and picaresque. On the way, the reader encounters Victorian physiognomists, racists and pseudo-scientists, hairdressers, advertisers, photographers, and pornographers and learns about the fascination with exemplary role models in imperial and postimperial Britain, such as athletes and celebrities. The disfiguring experience of World War One is powerfully documented, although it remains unclear why World War Two was less significant in British cultures of male beauty and ugliness. The second half of the book leads the reader through the postwar rise of the teenager, the cult of bodybuilding, the appearance of countercultures, and finally to contemporary gender fluidity and male insecurity.

Periodization remains a slight problem. Why start with the “first photographs” when satirical prints parodied a commercialized practice of male beauty in the Georgian period (from Restoration fops to Regency dandies)? And why conclude with David Beckham when his status as the beauty of his age does not come through nearly so clearly as that of Rupert Brooke a century earlier? More could be said about social snobbery and resistance to commercial culture as vulgar, trashy, and really not quite beautiful at all. The discussion of glamour could be extended to explore the paradox that the beauty of the celebrities drew its fascination from the very fact that the fans could not truly emulate it. There was also something of a melancholy quality about the cult of beauty in that even its greatest idols would grow old. Unless, that is, like Rupert Brooke, they died young. It is, therefore, hardly surprising to find that the culture of masculine beauty consistently focused on ideals of strength, youth, and affluence.

Those continuities notwithstanding, Deslandes usefully highlights more diverse standards of beauty on offer, as when he talks about different attitudes to hair (long versus short, or Euro versus Afro). Diversity in sexuality led to episodes of stylistic complexity, as in the 1970s when straight men dabbled with androgyny and gay men attempted to reclaim butch masculinity. Deslandes might have done a bit more work to problematize the boundaries of male beauty, youth, and sexiness along the lines of Germaine Greer's The Beautiful Boy (2003). Perhaps he was wary of getting sidetracked by debates on pederastic desire. But, as he remarks at the end of the book, there is indeed more to be said about youth and age (324). The power of the patriarchy (be it ever so balding) might partly reside in its resistance to self-scrutiny and the projection of its gaze onto the bodies of youths of both sexes.

This book is about discourses and practices, but it is haunted by classical and romantic images of male beauty as an ideal. A variety of feminists have long pointed out the burdens of such idealization on women and it would be interesting to read a study on the oppressive culture of male beauty. Deslandes has some interesting things to say about discourses of ugliness, most powerfully in relation to World War One disfigurement and AIDS, but his work could also have interrogated that most common enemy of beauty, which is, arguably, not horror but mediocrity. And then there is the question of Britishness. Many countries witnessed the rise of the capitalist mass media at the same time as the United Kingdom. Were Brooke, Beckham, and their ilk exemplary of modern male beauty or only of a distinctly British variant of it? It is, perhaps, the sign of a really worthwhile book that it raises even more questions than it answers.