Marketplace®

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Season 9Mar 7, 2024

You used to be so pretty

How did beauty become a prerequisite for success in South Korea?

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You used to be so pretty
Courtesy Haein Shim

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When journalist Elise Hu moved to Seoul, South Korea, to work as an international correspondent for NPR, she didn’t intend to report on the country’s beauty industry. 

But it was everywhere she looked. “I’m seeing before-and-after signage everywhere. There’s a chubbier torso and then a lean one right next to it,” she told host Reema Khrais.We don’t even know if it’s the same woman!” It was common for Hu to see people walking around with bandages from cosmetic surgery, or have strangers recommend procedures to remove her freckles. 

In her book, “Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture From the K-Beauty Capital,” Hu argues that for Korean women, the rise of K-beauty meant that being beautiful was a necessity, not a luxury. Hu says that in a competitive job market, “professional success is so tied into whether they look good, and not whether they just look good and meet conventional standards of beauty, but also whether they appear as if you were hardworking. And hardworking means working on your body, working on your face.”

Until recently, most office jobs in Korea required a headshot. Even the Korean Ministry of Employment and Labor posted a link on Twitter stating that “cosmetic surgery has become one of the seven credentials needed for employment.” 

Growing up in South Korea, Haein Shim took this advice to heart. She spent two hours a day applying makeup and styling her hair, hoping that the right look would help her move out of the working class. “Having brand-new shiny things made me feel seen, and somehow better … temporarily,” she told us.

She spent hundreds of dollars a month on clothes and makeup. But the beauty industry kept moving the goal post, inventing new flaws to be fixed.

One day Shim hit a breaking point. “I’ve been hearing so much that if you want to be pretty, if you want to be perfect, if you want it to be a beautiful woman, you have to endure pain. And I didn’t want it to be in pain anymore.” 

As Shim slowly stopped wearing makeup, she began to question everything she thought she knew about beauty, family and career. Her decision to leave behind makeup would upend her life and connect her to a community of Korean women within a movement called Escape the Corset.

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