Broadsheet

Carding on the catwalk?

Which industry depicts underage girls in skimpy outfits for a salivating public? "Girls Gone Wild"? Child porn? Nope, we're talking high fashion. The world of runway models has long been the strutting ground for skinny teens dressed up to impersonate adult women. But because the impersonations are so dang convincing, it's easy to forget that in any other context, turning children into sexy women would be considered nothing short of perverse.

But according to a story in the Guardian Wednesday, in Britain the days of fashion show runways gridlocked with dolled-up Goldilocks may soon be over. On Tuesday a panel created by the British Fashion Council recommended that girls under 16 be banned from the catwalk.

Concluding that it was "profoundly inappropriate" for girls under 16 to be depicted as adult women, the panel also suggested that fashion shows provide chaperones for 17- and 18-year-old models and for agencies to screen models for eating disorders annually.

After decades of watching early-teen models catapult from childhood onto the catwalk (think Kate Moss, Lily Cole and Naomi Cambell), the British recommendations may seem substantial. But the panel chose to remain relatively spineless on the issue of eating disorders: It ruled out weight checks and held off banning all models with an unhealthy body mass index. In the past year, both Madrid Fashion Week and Milan Fashion Week set minimum BMI for runway models. Instead, the Brits called for "rigorous scientific studies" to determine the prevalence of eating disorders among fashion models. In the wake of the deaths of Uruguayan model Luisel Ramos and Brazilian Ana Carolina Reston and the British panel's own inquiry suggesting that rates of anorexia among models could be as high as 40 percent, the call for more studies sounds like so much institutional throat clearing.

Posted in: Pop culture

Shacking up, not settling down
Horrors! Young couples are moving in together without plans for marriage
Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

Recent Posts

Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

Full Archive

RSS Feed

Posts by date

July 2009
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

Tips or Comments?

E-mail us at broadsheet@salon.com.