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Style & Beauty
breast cancer awareness bustedbreast cancer awareness


NIPS DON’T LIE: THE HYPOCRISY BEHIND CENSORING WOMEN'S BREASTS

How nipples expose everyday hypocrisies around our understanding of women’s
bodies and why it's important to rethink their place in culture.
By 
Rohina Katoch Sehra


On Assignment For HuffPost

Oct 3, 2022, 05:45 AM EDT

Chelsea Beck for HuffPost

It is bizarre that a body part no bigger than the smallest toenail is a think
piece obsession, a public relations landmine and a conservative nightmare.

The nipple is a bafflingly big deal, which explains the sartorial acrobatics
deployed for its concealment. Most women begin their day instinctively dressing
for a crisis of perkiness: a padded bra, an extra layer, a shawl chucked in the
handbag and in one inventive case, hand warmer gel pads slipped down the front.

Advertisement


Most of us can’t quite do life like Rachel from “Friends,” whose nipples were a
character unto their own. In real life, visible nipples get women labeled gross,
distracting, careless and unprofessional.

It is not women’s fault that they bloom inopportunely like toadstools on a golf
course, especially in the cold. Women huddling in shawls and scarves against
office air conditioning may be a running joke in workplace culture, but the
nip-on is a legitimate worry for many ― and studies prove that they aren’t
imagining it: Most offices are temperature-hostile to women and tailored only to
men’s comfort.

It’s all quite unfair. These spongy nubbins are objectively unremarkable under
the macro lens and indistinguishable gender-wise when photographed up close, as
clever Instagram account Genderless Nipples proves. Despite the inoffensively
smooth Barbie curves in lingerie ads flogging the latest in padding tech,
nipples resist suppression. No amount of optical de-nippling can make them go
away. They chafe on runners and swimmers. They respond pointily and
involuntarily to drops in temperature, the ebb and flow of hormones, even
nonsexual spikes in heart rate.




But so do the pupils, which grow and diminish continuously in response to both
sexual and nonsexual stimuli. Yet one doesn’t see people racing to conceal the
eyes while the chest-smoothening industry continues to grow via borderline
sadistic innovation.

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Perhaps in thrall of the dominant aesthetic of the day ― women like the
Kardashians, who look like they were poured into their bodysuits ― breasts are
trussed with the sort of industrial strength tape movie villains use on wayward
henchmen. Pasties, an older option for women who like some movement, are no
better. (Watch this clip of singer Lizzo wincing painfully as she peels off a
days-old pastie.)

These are mostly nonissues for men, save for a few documented concerns around
male nipples which can be traced to Japan. In 2015, a group of women was polled
for their opinion on the biggest turn-offs in men’s workplace style. ”Suke
chikubi″ (see-through nipples) were a top contender. (This could explain Japan’s
micro industry of summer-specific nipple-concealing solutions for men who don’t
wish to sacrifice propriety for comfort.)

But for the most part, anxieties around breasts in general and nipple exposure
in particular are gendered. Consider the world of sport. The coverage that
follows accidental chest reveals is consistently sexist. This explains former
UFC champion Ronda Rousey’s bizarre predicament during a 2013 match fight.
Straining in a chokehold that could have snapped her neck, her main concern
instead was her slowly sliding top. At the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics, French
figure skater Gabriella Papadakis had her top fall away mid-routine, forcing her
to make a choice no athlete should have to: stop to cover up and get a deduction
or keep going and resign to mortifying virality. She chose the latter and
finished in tears.



Jean Catuffe via Getty Images
Gabriella Papadakis skating with partner Guillaume Cizeron while dealing with a
wardrobe malfunction that exposed her chest during the 2018 PyeongChang Winter
Olympic Games.

Of course, this was no problem for 2021 Norwegian triathlete Kristian
Blummenfelt, whose triathlete suit turned practically transparent after the swim
leg, exposing his torso and briefs. (For men, the sport mandates uniforms that
cover the chest). His lot was good-natured ribbing and a gold medal.

Advertisement


Michael Bronski, professor of the practice in activism and media studies of
women, gender and sexuality at Harvard University, explained to HuffPost that
the chest, male or female, has never been a neutral site, not even in the
nipple- heavy world of ancient Western art and sculpture. Women’s bodies have
always been sexualized.

“If we look at statues from Ancient Greece and Imperial Rome, nudity, per se,
has multiple purposes,” Bronski explained. “Male nudes (with nipples and
genitals) were often meant to embody virtues such as patriotism, steadfastness,
moral and emotional strength. Female nudes were more sexualized even as they
represented ‘female’ virtues such as modesty. And, of course, statues of women
that were not nude ― often goddesses, or monsters such as Medusa ― represented
male qualities (wisdom in the case of Athena or a male fear of castration such
as Medusa).”

Clues to our tolerance of nudity in art and sculpture compared to the agitation
around, say, an ordinary bathroom selfie, lie in the relative newness of the
photographic medium.

“Because photography is, since 1920 or so, accessible to everyone, it does not
take an ‘artist’ to be able to produce photos,” Bronski added. “Older fine
arts-painting, sculpture and drawing had a long history (going back to Greece
and including the Italian Renaissance) that had a tradition of male and female
nudity that made it more acceptable, even as women were to a large degree
sexualized and the object of the male gaze.”

Bronski continued, “Even if people were ‘turned on’ by one of these works, the
purpose of the work was ‘artistic,’ not to encourage a sexual response (even if
it did). The fact that photographs could be quite easily mass produced lessened
their value as fine art and allowed them to be seen as less authentic art, and
therefore more likely to cause cultural distress and hence be banned or at least
be seriously disapproved of.”

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Chelsea Beck for HuffPost

Jo Weldon, headmistress at the New York School of Burlesque and author of “The
Burlesque Handbook,” told HuffPost that the censorship of her posts online
reveals a pattern: “I have noticed that, up to a point, it has more to do with
the pose than with what’s revealed. If the pose resembles typical centerfold
poses, it gets taken down, and I get a warning.”

In 2020, Instagram took down Black model and body positivity advocate Nyome
Nicholas-Williams’ photo, a lovely waist-up shot of her in the nude hugging
herself, her breasts covered by her arms. The same photo, shared on her
photographer Alexandra Cameron’s account, was left untouched. Cameron, who is
white, works with women of all ethnicities and shoots a lot in this style, asked
her followers to post Nicholas-Williams’ photo to test her hunch: The deletion
was discriminatory.

Her followers reported that the photo was censored on their accounts, too. While
Cameron joined forces with writer Gina Martin (known for her successful campaign
to make upskirting a criminal offense) to petition Instagram, Nicholas-Williams
and her followers hashtagged their disapproval of Instagram’s surveillance and
shutdown of Black women’s bodies, especially fat Black bodies.

In response, Instagram, which largely leaves the male chest alone and has been
accused of letting thin, able-bodied, apolitical Caucasian women in
similarly-styled photoshoots stay up, reinstated the deleted photos. This was
significant given that earlier that year, the company had admitted the
possibility of racial algorithmic bias and initiated a #shareBlackstories
hashtag to foreground marginalized narratives.

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Ridiculously, the new policy now makes a distinction between types of
“breast-holding” (hugging/cupping vs. squeezing/grabbing), effectively governing
the way women interact with their own bodies. It claims to use a combination of
the subject’s stance, finger curvature and change in breast shape to distinguish
between a sexual grab-hoist situation vs. women posing for, say, a confidence
shoot, topless protest or breastfeeding awareness campaign.

Weldon cautions against such distinctions.

“I think things can get misogynistic very quickly if we prioritize women who use
their bodies to make a statement over women who use their bodies to attract
partners or to make money,” she said. “I think when a company shuts down one
type of presentation of women’s bodies they’ll inevitably shut down the other.
It’s not just a slippery slope because it’s indicative of the way women’s bodies
can be seen as sites of moral contamination, which is a thread in the history of
laws about women’s bodies.”

On their part, women have always worked their chests into protests, often at
great personal risk. In the Indian state of Kerala in 2018, women posed with
watermelons, sometimes in the nude, in solidarity with hijabi Muslim
college-goers whose male professor accused them of immodesty by letting their
headscarves fall regrettably short of their chests and displaying them “like
watermelon slices.” When beloved Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani bared her
right breast in a promotional video for the 2012 César Awards (the French
Oscars) she was banished from the country, setting off a raging cultural
reckoning.

But breasts have not always been bared in defiance or to express hurt: Women
have flashed them in retaliatory triumph, like when ’80s Italian parliamentarian
and porn star Ilona Staller was famous for campaigning with her nipples showing
casually and wanting to show up to her first day in parliament in see-through
clothes, just as much as she was for her progressive Leftist politics.

And she’s not alone. HuffPost interviewed three women who are challenging the
way we look at our bodies and chests in particular with their work.

Advertisement



LINZE RICE, JOURNALIST AND OWNER OF THE TATA TOP



Rice told HuffPost she’s here to stir good trouble, to “question antiquated
ideas and aggressively promote fun, body positivity and amazing boob puns.” Her
Chicago-based queer- and women-run business makes clever nude-illusion bikini
tops that are perfect for protests, Halloween parties and dysmorphic breast
cancer journeys alike.

This is no gag gift; these bikinis score on style. (In June this year, Rice
called out Kylie Jenner for posing in a Jean Paul Gaultier X Lotta Volkova
“Naked” Bikini top that is indefensibly similar to her hallmark design.) She
says her designs highlight the fact that legality and fairness aren’t always the
same thing.

“For example, if you’re a trans woman or are nonbinary and you have breasts but
your driver’s license doesn’t reflect that, what is your right to be topless in
a public space where men are allowed to go shirtless but women aren’t? These are
the types of scenarios that I think about a lot,” she said. “I saw someone
reselling a top on Poshmark who said they had used it while going through top
surgery and no longer needed it. I found it really amazing that it served such a
meaningful purpose and now was being passed on to mean something special to
someone else.”


MISHA JAPANWALA, ARTIST AND SCULPTOR


Advertisement


Japanwala, who is Pakistani, creates powerful wearable sculptures molded from
women’s bodies. Visually, her casts feel at once fragile and armour-like, a
tension that leaps off photographs. Back in design school, “I had been
reflecting a lot on the culture of shaming women in Pakistan and the kinds of
conversations of that culture that are swept under the rug,” she said. “So many
systems (patriarchy, white supremacy, capitalism) stand to benefit from us
believing that our bodies are inherently shameful, and my work is rooted in the
outright rejection of that shame.”

Her studio process, which memorializes “every pore, blemish, stretch mark and
curve” has earned her abuse and death threats. “People seem to be most triggered
not just because my art centers nude bodies, but because I refuse to change
anything about them,” she shared. “When the nude female form simply exists the
way it does in my work and doesn’t meet the conditions of existence that so many
have for the way we are to move through the world, it leads to a lot of anger.”


LYDIA REEVES, ARTIST AND SCULPTOR



Reeves’ Brighton, U.K., studio is decorated with stunning chrome-finished casts
of women’s torsos, custom work for clients who love the unmistakable tenderness
of her approach.

“Representing a wide and diverse range of bodies is most important for me,” she
said. “I hope that people look at my work and not only think that it’s a
beautiful piece of art but look beyond that to the beauty within the diverse
bodies I share.”

Advertisement


Almost every piece is supercharged with emotion: She helps women document
surgeries and childbirth, aging and recovery. Being a business owner who shares
her work online can be “nerve-wracking,” she admitted, especially because “I
really believe that the type of work I do is extremely educational and Instagram
censorship is very real with work like mine.”

She would like her work to reach more people in all its realism and honesty so
that they can “gain a healthier relationship with their own body. Instagram
censorship just stops this from happening, yet will happily allow pictures of
photoshopped models which can very easily give people a negative view toward
their own bodies. It just doesn’t make sense.”


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