27 July 2007

Chinese mums to be bare their bellies


This is an intriguing photo of Chinese women baring all in a pregnant belly colouring contest of sorts that you would be more likely to expect to come out of America (after all, there are pregnant beauty/bikini contests all over the US!)

"Mostly born in the late 1970s or the early 1980s, these women have never missed an opportunity to show off their natural beauty, even when they're pregnant," a cameraman said.
This image actually surprises me because from my own research into maternity wear, Asian cultures tend to view a naked pregnant belly more conservatively. When I was looking at maternity clothes in Japan, for example, I noticed that women are still relegated to covering up their bellies for the most part. Maternity frocks are more pinafore than plunging and you are more likely to find tops with puppies and kittens over tight and Lycra. None of the maternity magazines show exposed pregnant bodies/bellies and the majority of the information is illustrated with cartoons. Since I started this research I have been under the impression that publicly pregnant bodies are still very taboo in a number of Asian cultures, however, this must quite apparently be changing given this image of Chinese women. Moreover, I do get alot of Asian readers on this blog (mostly Singapore, Japan, China, Malaysia) which indicates that there is a similar level of interest and/or fascination with baby bumps and pregnancy weight gain which I suppose does not necessarily surprise me given the global nature of the mass media.
I find the cameraman's comment above interesting as well. He implies that because the women are of a certain generation, they are more 'liberal' perhaps in their views about exposing their pregnant bellies in public; that somehow women in their mid-late 20s are exhibitionists in a way that their mothers and grandmothers are not. The use of 'even when they're pregnant' also suggests that despite the cultural sentiment that women should hide their bellies, these younger women clearly are challenging social mores but are behaving almost as expected of their generation.


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The Baby Bump Project by Meredith Nash is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.