SCROLL

Welcome to my blog on English Language & Literature

Saturday 12 January 2019

THE HIGH COST OF VANITY IN 21st CENTURY

A well-known principle of social psychology, social comparison theoryproposes that we are constantly evaluating ourselves in relation to other people. In downward social comparison, you make yourself feel better by viewing yourself as more fortunate than others. The converse process also applies. In upward social comparison, you feel far worse about yourself if you see (or believe) that someone is outdoing you. Downward social comparison is a great coping process because it allows you to view a bad situation by looking at others who are worse off than you (poorer, less attractive, more stressed) and concluding that things aren’t really so bad. Upward social comparison can cause you to berate yourself unnecessarily because you feel that you’re being outdone by your friends, relatives, co-workers, or perhaps your Facebook friends.People 
Workman and Lee believed that social comparison is involved in the processes that lead us to empty our wallets for consumer goods that carry with them recognizable, expensive, labels. From sunglasses to sneakers, little symbols signify their price and, for many of us, our value as human beings. The smart shopper knows how to find these status symbols at bargain prices. The very savviest may still prefer to shell out the full amounts in order to be the first among their social circle to be wearing the latest models. However, as you'll see shortly, people often dress to impress themselves, propping their self-concept up by feeding their need to look attractive and successful.
Your desire to have recognizable brand names, or “brand sensitivity,” means that brand names are important to you in the process of making purchasing decisions. You may be highly brand sensitive, however, without knowing it. Through unconscious conditioning, you’ve come to associate certain brands with certain attributes, a factor that plays heavily into celebrity marketing.  When movie stars show up in ads for a particular cosmetic, line of clothing, or even underwear, you’ll be drawn toward those products because you form positive associations with the brand and the person. 
Not everyone is equally tempted by Ralph Lauren or Prada seals of approval, no matter who is modeling them. According to Workman and Lee, it should only be the most vain among us who are the most likely to stroll the fashion boutiques. There are 2 basic categories of vanity: physical appearance and the achievement of success. Fashion models and athletes are vain in the sense of wanting to be attractive.  People who purchase expensive products are vain in the sense of wanting to look successful. There are two subtypes within each type of vanity: being preoccupied with appearance or success vs. seeing yourself as more attractive or successful than you are.  
The kind of social comparison process that Workman and Lee believed to be important in consumer decisions involves the thoughts and feelings you have about how much more attractive or successful you are than others. People high in private self-consciousness tend to be self-reflective and introspective. If you’re high in private self-consciousness, for example, you would agree with the statement “I think about myself a lot.”
Workman and Lee reason that both vanity and private self-consciousness involve egocentrism, or the tendency to regard yourself as the center of the universe. If you’re always thinking about your own thoughts and feelings, it’s natural that you’ll develop a preoccupation with yourself and, hence, an excessive concern with your appearance and accomplishments.

Vanity is considered to stem from pride, which is one of the 7 deadly sins. People don’t like to admit that they’re vain. In fact, the vainest among us are probably the least likely to admit it. The fact that the participants in the Workman and Lee study owned up to their own self-preoccupation is impressive, supporting the widespread tendency of advertisers to use brand-name manipulation in the market place.  
If your vanity takes the form of being preoccupied with achievement, you’ll constantly seek expensive labels to prove your own worth and success. If it's your physical appearance you focus on, you’ll be lured by fancy clothes because you think they'll make you look better. The physically vain woman won’t want to pull out a drug-store lipstick in front of others to retouch her makeup; she’ll prefer to reach for the shiny gold department store variety costing 3 or 4 times as much. The color may be exactly the same, but it’s the glamour of the tube that matters most to her.
Oddly enough, many of the high-end goods that we wear can’t be seen by anyone else. No one knows whether you’re wearing Hanes or Calvin Klein’s under those designer jeans.  It probably doesn’t matter to too many people, including your romantic partners, whether the sheets on your bed come from Target or from Bloomingdale’s. Therefore, when we shell out the extra cash for what goes under our clothes, or over our mattresses, we may be succumbing to the pull that vanity has over our sensibilities.
Extrapolating somewhat from the Workman and Lee study, it’s possible to understand vanity as a variant of the unhealthy form of narcissism.  In vulnerable narcissism, people are constantly seeking ways to feel more important, attractive, and successful as a means of compensating for their inner feelings of weakness and inferiority.  Equating designer goods with personal value feeds into the worst kind of narcissistic vulnerability.
The take-home message is that it’s worth taking stock of your own motivations before you make your next sizeable purchase of a brand-name item. Who are you trying to please? Do you feel that you need to look better than other people, and that’s why you need that validation of your worth? Is it part of a larger pattern in which you think you’re better-looking than everyone else and “deserve” to treat yourself? It’s possible that the high-priced item is of better quality, and that your investment will prove worth the financial sacrifice. However, by understanding your own motivations, your budget and your self-image can both benefit. 

IF I WERE YOU -CBSE CLASS IX

Q. What has the intruder heard about Gerrard?
A. The intruder only knows gerrard by his name. he does not know that he is a playwright. Also he is the owner of the house.he only knows that he lives in the wilds of Essex. Also he is a kind of mysteryman. Not many people know abot him

Q. Who is the intruder and what kind of man he is?
A. The intruder is a criminal. Also he has killed a policeman. The police is chasing him. He wants to live as Gerrard after killing him.

Q. How does the intruder threaten Gerrard ?
A. The intruder threatens Gerrard that he would soon stop being smart. He would make gerrard crawl. He wants to know a few things.

Q. Why does the intruder want to kill gerrard? How does Gerrard befool the intruder with his false story?
A. Gerrard tells the intruder that one of  his men  had been caught. The things which should have been burnt have been found. So, due to that he expected trouble that night. That’s why, he wanted to clear off at the earliest. 

ANSWERS OF THE TEXT BOOK

Q. “At last a sympathetic audience.”
(i) Who says this?

A. Gerrard says this.

(ii) Why does he say it?

A. He says it because the intruder shows some sympathy towards him.

(iii) Is he sarcastic or serious?

Ans : He is sarcastic.

Q. Why does the intruder choose Gerrard as the man whose identity he wants
to take on? 
                
A. The intruder chooses Gerrard because he finds him closely similar to him. If he wears clothes like Gerrard does, no one knows that they are two persons.

Q. “I said it with bullets.”
(i) Who says this?

A. Gerrard says this.

(ii) What does it mean?

A. He is very dangerous person.


(iii) Is it the truth? What is the speaker’s reason for saying this?

A. It is not the truth. He says so to make the intruder change his mind.

Q. What is Gerrard’s profession? Quote the parts of the play that support your
answer.

A. Gerrard is a playwright by profession. The supporting words are, : “sorry I can’t let you have the props in time for rehearsal……..’

Q. “You’ll soon stop being smart.”
(i) Who says this?

A. The intruder says this.

(ii) Why does the speaker say it?

A. The speaker says it because Gerrard hasn’t frlt any fear so far though he has a gun in his hand.

(iii) What according to the speaker will stop Gerrard from being smart?

A. Gerrard would stop being smart after being hit by one of his bullets.

Q. “They can’t hang me twice.”
(i) Who says this?

A. The intruder says this.

(ii) Why does the speaker say it?   
     
A. Because he has already committed a murder. The penalty of death can’t be given to him twice.

7. “A mystery I propose to explain.” What is the mystery the speaker proposes to explain?

A. Gerrard says this. The mystery is about Gerrard’s telephoning his orders. Then he would be suddenly disappearing, but again coming back. The intruder wants to do very things like Gerrard does.

8. “This is your big surprise.”
(i) Where has this been said in the play?

A. This has been said in the play when Gerrard tells the intruder not to shoot him. If he shoots him he’d hang if not as himself then as V.C.Gerrard.

(ii) What is the surprise?

A. The big surprise is that the intruder won’t kill him. Gerrard is right in saying this.

Prepositions practice SET-3

Fill with correct prepositions from the brackets- 1. We regret that we cannot comply ________ your request. (With/ by) 2. The best candi...

Popular Posts