Korean Eye Beauty
Many of the world’s loveliest women are Asian, and those from Korea can hold their own with the best of them. This is a view shared by both Westerners as well as Asians.
So why does South Korea have the highest ratio of cosmetic surgeons to citizens than anywhere else in the world? It is reliably estimated that nearly fifty percent of the population have either gone under the knife or would like to at some time and that includes a fair proportion of men.
What’s more this trend is growing rapidly in China and Japan.
The most popular surgical procedures are to enhance the eyes, known as double eyelid surgery and to straighten and raise noses.
In other words, many beautiful North Eastern Asian women want to look more like Western women with rounder eyes a more oblong rather than the heart shape to their faces, having straighter noses and leaner but more voluptuous bodies.
One answer is that the exposure to western fashion magazines, TV shows, films et al which overwhelmingly feature western style beauties that is suffered throughout the region encourages women to conform to white standards of perceived beauty.
South Korean pop culture has become very popular throughout Japan and China with Korean pop music diva Boa Kwon leading the way.
She is known to have had eyelid surgery and her nose heightened and consequently this has inspired many Korean and other North Eastern Asian girls that it is ´cool´ to go under the knife to look more Western.
Perhaps the most telling reason of all for this popular desire for cosmetic surgery enhancement is the conception that embracing the Western idea of beauty is a good career move.
The work ethos of Koreans, Japanese and Chinese is the envy of the world, is it any wonder then that undergoing cosmetic surgery as a means to obtaining a better job or a promotion has become so popular.
Whatever the reasons it is to be regretted that so many Korean women have exchanged their natural and attractive features for a synthetic beauty.
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Tags: cosmetic-surgery, blepharoplasty, double-eyelid-surgeryRelated posts










No offense,but... said:
No offense,but this article is kind of stereotyping.I'm a Korean-American and I'm sick and tired of people stereotyping Koreans and Korean-Americans as plastic-surgery addicts.
Give me a reliable source.I think you're making all these up.
Where is the "reliable" source?This is really annoying.And how do you know that BoA got plastic surgeries?Do you have her before-debut pictures?My gosh.This article is so generalizing and annoying.
Jaks said:
Please accept our apologies, the article was not meant to imply any derogatory or offence to Koreans or for that matter any body of any nationality who has undergone cosmetic enhancement surgery.
This article was written to illustrate the growing popularity of cosmetic surgery throughout the world.
It just so happens that both men and women from South Korea closely followed by the Japanese have the highest ratio of cosmetic enhancement surgery and practitioners on the planet.
The growing numbers, reputation and cost competitiveness of South Korean plastic surgeons is drawing people from all over SE Asia, Japan and China in particular.
Amongst our sources are the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) “From Our Own Correspondent “ broadcast on 3rd Feb 2005, BBC archive 12th July 2001, Time Magazine archives and a survey by AGB Neilson that found that 86% of South Korean men aged between 25 and 37 believe their career prospects would be enhanced by having a good appearance and body.
Even President Roh Moo-hyun has had plastic surgery around his eyes.
It seems that even the Korean pop star Boa Kwon that you refer to has had no problem with admitting the fact that she has had eyelid surgery and her nose heightened.
Clearly this would be evident in the before and after photos of this Asian super star so to deny it would have been unwise.
There was one source that we are unable to verify claiming that 50 % of South Korean women have undergone cosmetic surgery, we believe that it should read 50 % of 20- 30 year old women have had cosmetic surgery.
True or false, it is hard to deny the fact South Koreans of both sexes have a world wide reputation for their willingness to undergo surgical enhancement to their looks and bodies.
We trust that this explanation will satisfy you that no offence was intended.
Should you care to access Google search on the subject you will find innumerable references to the subject of South Korean plastic surgery and the many prominent Koreans that have had the surgical procedures.
Ji-young said:
I'm a Korean American teenager and for the first poster to blatantly deny that a good chunk of the youth population in Korea are plastic surgery addicts is just another example of someone burying his or head in the sand, refusing to accept the truth.
Do you know how many parents in Seoul give their kids, especially their girls, double-eyelid surgery as a 16th birthday present or high school graduation present? Even MTV ran a documentary on this asian phenomenon a few years ago, with Asian sources, including Koreans, who had undergone or planned to undergo the surgery.
I visit family and friends there every year and on a number of occasions I've seen or heard parents who allow their kids to get plastic surgery because "enhanced" looks, western or not, brighten their job prospects no matter how talented or qualified for the job they are. As the author of the article already stated, many Korean celebs, including BOA, have owned up to their surgeries, so how can you now try to call this article an exercise in stereotyping?
A stereotype is no longer a stereotype if it is true across most circumstances and situations. Maybe with more international media coverage and articles like this, exposing the dangers and superficiality pervasive in our culture's obsession with a monolithic standard of beauty, beautiful young korean men and women won't feel the need to alter their looks and self-esteem to live up to a plastic, media-fueled perception of beauty.
Ji-young said:
Oh, and since the first poster wanted some, I'm assuming unbiased evidence of this plastic surgery phenomenon pervading south korea, here's a link for your reading pleasure: http://koreanpopculture.blogspot.com/2006/03/understanding-cosmetic-surgery-in.html
Felipe Calderon said:
I saw "Good for Her: A Documentary about Cosmetic Surgery in Korea". It is a very poor documentary indeed, since the author clearly wants to make a point no matter what the truth might be. The fact that the documentary has very few interviews and that it doesn't use Korean sources but only Enlish-speaking Korean sources makes it useless. It's like going to the US and only asking to Spanish-speaking sources.
With regards to the topic of Koreans and surgery, the differences in content between Korean sources and Enlish sources are striking. Personally, I trust much more Korean sources. The same way that I use American sources when I want to know about what's really going on in the US, I use Korean sources when I want to know about what's going in Korea. Most academic and newspapers articles in Korean show that Korean surgeons exaggerate the figures to bring more clients. This is called marketing, and has been around for centuries now. And please don't use Korean celebrities as a standard for the rest of society. 90-95% of Hollywood actors and actresses have undergone surgery, and I'm quite sure that the figure's much, much lower if we talk about Americans in general.
Felipe Calderon said:
Oh, and I forgot to mention that Latin American countires top the table of most cosmetic surgical procedures per capita. Brazil, Venezuela, Argentina, Colombia, Chile, etc, are far ahead than any other country in this respect. In any case, it's almost impossible to know how many American, East Asian or European women go overseas for cosmetic surgery, which makes any statistic useless really. For example, thousands of European women go to Brazil for surgery, but they're not included in any statistic. The fact that East Asians are more open to talk about having undergone surgery doesn't mean that they do it more often than people anywhere else.
lika said:
i agree. not only koreans. but alot of other east asians. im asian, and listening 2 almost ALL my female friends rant about how westerners look better is pure evidence that there is a growing number in cosmetic surgery patients in asia. its odd. the obvious bleached hair, the thick makeup, the thick eyeliner, those hideous obvious blue contacts..are just appetizers. esepcially popular among teenagers. thoguh, asians are not the ones with the most comsetic surgery numbers, i must say that its growing and its sad. most of these asian singers and actresses are like carbon copies. its like "hey, its another asian barbie. WHERE'S KEN?"
Spreading like a virus « if only i could fly… said (pingback):
[...] had to have featuristic face appearances and wide hips, but now and these days, it is all about surgeries and white skin. typical korean beauty standard another typical korean beauty [...]
CA said:
A friend of mine had her eyes done when she was in her twenties, met the man of her dream in her thirties, never told him about the surgery and when their twins were born, there was confusion and unspoken tension as both babies have mummy's eyes BEFORE the surgery.
True story. Honest!
HANGYORI said:
perhaps,theyre surgeries are just more exposed bcuz they dont really hide it.lol
anung said:
that was the most and unthinkable news that struck me, my god like thunderbolt.if what you informed is really true most of the korean celebs are just plastic stars.thank god, i'll be able to discourage most korean crazy. teens out here in nagaland india that korean stars are artificial for real.but at the end i guess to be something you have to give up something.
princess said:
hmm im agree
sennalynn said:
this article is biased and presents fabricated information. Here's a link to the statistics of plastic surgery around the world.
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/hea_pla_sur_pro-health-plastic-surgery-procedures
I don't find it very surprising that Japan is #5 on the list, and we never hear about their plastic surgeries since they are very secretive people. Compared to them, Koreans are to frank and honest about plastic surgery. The asian eyelid surgery originated in Japan and spread to Korea, Taiwan, and China. http://www.drmeronk.com/asian/asian-overview.html
Also, why can't asians dye their hair and wear color contacts without being judged? If a brunette westerner decided to dye her hair bleach blonde and cover her brown eyes with blue contacts, people do not judge her for wanting to be WHITER.