Calliope And Body Dysmorphia In Shakespeare's Novels

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Calliope is a fourteen year old who identifies as female based upon the information Tessie and Milton have provided. As Calliope’s parents, Tessie and Milton migrated from Greece to the United States with the intent of creating a better life. They earned their income through their very profitable restaurant: Zebra Room, and amidst of their success, Calliope was born. The biological sex of their child was supposed to remain a secret, instead a medical document was discovered revealing the true biological gender during a family trip to a hospital in New York. Calliope attended an all girls school and consequently, she witnessed all of her classmates’ bodies transform into a womanly figure except for her. As a result, Calliope develops body dysmorphia due to the lack of changes taking place within her body which prompts further questioning of her sexuality. Because her biological gender has been concealed, Calliope feels insecure and confused about her gender. Throughout Jeffrey Eugenides novel, Middlesex, Calliope embarks on a journey of discovering sexuality while battling the …show more content…

Calliope is not the only human who has been a victim of self inflicted body shaming, studies have revealed that women go on severe diets to obtain what the media defines as a perfect body. In Rose Weitz and Samantha Kwan’s novel: The Politics of Women’s Bodies, “27.3 percent of women are “terrified” or getting fat… A total of 5.9 percent of women met psychiatric criteria for Anorexia or Bulimia (USA Today 1985)” (68-69). Not only do women struggle with the appearance of their bodies, some punish their bodies by self induced vomiting or starvation in attempt to achieve an idealistic body. While Calliope feels ashamed for lacking a womanly figure, woman elsewhere envy Calliope’s body and are bullying themselves as a

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