anotheranon: (women)
anotheranon ([personal profile] anotheranon) wrote2010-04-15 10:23 pm

body art and age

I'm working my way down the infinite book stack. I'm finally delving into Alternative femininities: body, age and identity, an academic look at tattooed women, post-teen goths, and other women with non-traditional styles who plan to maintain them past college age. It starts with a description of who (the appendix lists details of all interviewees) and why (how do older women navigate subculture?), followed by a chapter defining a common understanding of mainstream femininity.

Just as I start this I run into Painted Ladies: on tats and trashiness a decidedly less academic source but I'm pleased that it criticizes the notion that Nice Girls Don't.

Both stick in my mind as though I don't have tattoos, I do have body piercings that according to mainstream notions aren't only questionable to begin with, but that I've hung onto long past their sell-by date (and plan to keep doing so). I originally got them in my twenties during a time I was getting pressure from family and peers to look a certain way, as a way of marking my body as mine. I also hoped they'd serve as a kind of filter to avoid judgmental lovers - I figured that if someone was going to pearl-clutch at the sight of my steel then maybe they didn't need to be seeing me naked :P

In other words, I didn't do it for the pretty :P

I guess it's just bewildering to me that it's news to some people that not all women want to look the same, or please anyone but themselves with their body adornment.

[identity profile] danabren.livejournal.com 2010-04-16 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
My husband and I have had huge battles over body adornment - he met and fell in love with me when I had more inks and rings than he did, why would he then be so opposed to me getting MORE? And the dust storm after the tat I got on our honeymoon??? Wheee!

We haven't really come up with a reasonable solution past "money is too tight to justify getting more tattoos", maybe someday we'll be fortunate enough to someday be able to afford this fight again LOL.

[identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com 2010-04-18 03:32 am (UTC)(link)
Ouch - doesn't make much sense to me either, but the fighting can't have been fun :(

I got my first piercing on my own - for a variety of reasons I needed to go alone. D. was there for each afterwards :) Happily the only guff I can anticipate these days are from new people.

[identity profile] wendyzski.livejournal.com 2010-04-16 04:27 pm (UTC)(link)
I confess I have no ink or interesting piercings. Mostly because I used to work in a seniors building, and have seen what old people tattoos look like.

But I certainly have gotten over my white-suburban-girl "only bikers have ink"ness. Mostly. I do remember looking at pics of a friend in the delivery room with her new baby - and her green hair and facial piercings - and thinking "yep, I'm officially an old fuddy duddy..."

[identity profile] dustdaughter.livejournal.com 2010-04-17 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
I don't have any tattoos or piercings. Not opposed to them but my skin scars very easily. I enjoy looking at other folks' tats and hearing the stories behind them.

I like that idea of using them as a filter for judgmental lovers. Maybe I should view my scars that way!