14 March 2011

Fair and chic

A nice tan is much pursued by ladies (and maybe gents) of the West, but it is not so for people in the East. While the tan of someone in a Western country may be the result of a vacation in some exotic tropical place, dark skin is undesirable in the East.

Have you ever noticed while traveling in Asia that women (and men too, sometimes) like to carry an umbrella with them to shade them from the sun? It is not only older women who do this, although they are more inclined to do so. Many younger Asian women are aware of the damage that ultraviolet rays will do to their skin. Lying on the beach or the balcony to enjoy the sun is not a common pastime for Asian women, unless they are very westernized. Fairness in complexion or, to be exact, whiteness of the skin, is valued a lot more than a nice tan in Asia, probably by both sexes.


If you travel in Vietnam, where a bike—motorized or non-motorized—is a common vehicle for commuting, you will see women wearing long detachable sleeves on their arms. The same if you visit Japan; you will come across many women wearing large-brimmed hats and detachable sleeves on their arms while taking a stroll in the park.

While a tan on someone in the West may indicate affluence, in the sense that they have taken a vacation to enjoy distant beaches and the sun, it may imply something different in the East. Traditionally, only Asian women who are from the working class need to work outside of their home and be exposed to the merciless sun.

There is a saying in southern China that mere whiteness of the skin is capable of masking three counts of ugliness in a person. So there you go.





For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International.

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