By Jean Lee Scheidnes
©2000 Columbia News Service
March 2000
NEW YORK--Asian Americans are identified by their eyes more than any other
feature. So, for this community, cosmetic surgery on the eyelids goes to the
heart of identity politics and ethnic pride. Eyelid surgery is the country's
third most popular cosmetic surgery, surpassed only by liposuction and breast
augmentation, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.
The society's board-certified plastic surgeons performed 120,001 cosmetic
eyelid surgeries in 1998, twice the number performed in 1992. Cosmetic eyelid
surgery, blepharoplasty, is usually meant to reduce signs of aging, but among
younger Asian Americans--especially those of Korean, Japanese, and Chinese
descent--one method of blepharoplasty has gained significant popularity.
The majority of Asians have upper eyelids that appear to be taut from brow to
lashes, rather than segmented by a crease. Asian blepharoplasty patients often
request the creation of an upper eyelid crease, or "double eyelid,"
which uncovers a portion of the natural eye contours, making the eyes slightly
larger, rounder and more amenable to makeup, as well as exposing more of the
eyelashes.
Since non-Asians are typically born with double eyelids, this procedure has
been construed as "Westernization," implying that Asians desire a more
Caucasian appearance. But many in the Asian American community argue that the
point isn't to look Western, but to look more like other Asians, many of whom
have double eyelids naturally.
The notion of Westernization has sparked some criticism in the Asian American
community. Authors Maxine Hong Kingston and David Mura are uncomfortable with
the popularity of the surgery, and believe that altering eyes, features by which
Asians are so easily identified, is an attempt to conceal or deny Asian heritage
and conform to mainstream American beauty ideals.
"It's evidence of internalized racism," says Mura. "It really
indicates something about the way in which Asians in America are indoctrinated
by white standards of beauty. They feel less beautiful than those who fit the
Caucasian standard of beauty." The main reason for that, Mura says, is the
low representation of Asians in the media.
"People grow up watching the media, which is where people are beautiful
and powerful. You see very few Asian faces. The message is: the way you look is
not beautiful, or doesn't count, or doesn't even exist," he says. He
believes the American media also account for much of the surgery's popularity in
Asia.
"The power of the American media and American culture stretches all over
the globe, and can cause people to devalue their own culture," says Mura.
Asian Americans who disagree with Mura's interpretation often point out that
a large percentage of Koreans, Japanese, and Chinese are born with creased
eyelids, although they certainly tend to be shaped differently than those of,
say, Caucasians. In fact, in some regions, such as in southern China, as many as
70 percent are born with them. In addition, double-eyelid surgery is enormously
popular in Asia, and has been considered attractive since well before the
infiltration of Western media. Therefore, many argue, Asians seeking double
eyelids are simply trying to look like the more attractive members of their own
race.
"The desire for double eyelids has taken on a strange idea in the U.S.
that Asian women want to look like Caucasians and that they desire [moon-shaped]
eyes," says Shi Kagy, editor of AsiaMs, an online Asian beauty magazine (www.AsiaMs.net).
"In truth, Asian women want double eyelid folds that look like natural
Asian type folds, and dislike the Caucasian type," she says.
For ten years, Dr. Jeffrey Ahn, Director of Facial Plastic Surgery at
Columbia University Medical Center, has performed about 200 Asian
blepharoplasties a year. He dispels the idea that his patients have tried to
obscure their racial identity.
"I don't get a single patient asking to be 'Westernized,'" he says.
"A lot of doctors still call it Westernization of the eyelid, which proves
they have little understanding of the Asian patients." He stresses the
importance of going to a surgeon who is accustomed to operating on Asian
eyelids, because of the fundamental differences in facial anatomy.
"The surgeon should have aesthetic appreciation of the Asian
eyelid," Ahn says. "A lot of the Caucasian surgeons think making it
more like the Caucasian eyelids makes it more beautiful, and that's where
unnaturalness results."
Ahn repeats, "I don't remember any Asian patient requesting to look less
Asian."
Dr. John A. McCurdy, Jr., a plastic surgeon in Hawaii and author of the book
"Cosmetic Surgery of the Asian Face," has performed thousands of Asian
blepharoplasties over the last 20 years. He agrees that patients want to
preserve their Asian characteristics--but says that wasn't always the case.
"A lot's changed over the years," McCurdy says. "It used to be
that Asian girls, especially immigrant girls, were requesting the Westernization
procedure. They wanted to look Caucasian. But now what they're requesting is a
procedure to enhance the double eyelid while maintaining the other
characteristics of the Asian eye."
In general, the hour-long process of Asian blepharoplasty involves excising a
crescent- or tilde-shaped piece of skin out of the eyelid, removing some of the
underlying fat, and then stitching the sides back together. There are different
methods to accommodate variation in the height and curvature of the desired
crease.
The average cost of the surgery in the U.S. is $1,734. During recovery, which
takes about a week due to painful swelling and discoloration, the eyes must be
treated with topical antibiotics and cannot be washed.
Ji Jeong Han, who had the procedure at age 15 by Ahn, is aware that
non-Asians might misunderstand her intentions. "It's like if a white girl
got cornrows, people would say she's trying to look black. People always think
they are being copied," she says. "Obviously, white people have reason
to think people want to look more like them. If you look at movies, you know how
Hollywood stars have blond hair and perfect figures and all that."
She insists that she had the surgery primarily to correct her eyelashes and
believes most Asians have the surgery for simple aesthetic reasons.
"All my Korean friends had it done just because they wanted bigger
eyes," she says. Han, now 18, was encouraged by her grandmother, her
mother, and her aunt, all of whom she describes as having naturally large eyes.
"Before I got mine done, we used to look at Korean magazines or TV, and all
the Korean actresses had big eyes or had had it done. They think it's
prettier," she says.
Whatever the reason for the surgery, one thing seems certain: the pressure to
conform the physical appearance to an ideal is not exclusive to either Western
or Asian culture. And, in any attempt to meet a standard, there's always a risk
of losing individuality.
"After I got it done, my parents said it looked nice because it was
rounder," Han says, "but on the other hand something special was gone.
Uniqueness." In fact, Han says, "I think people look better the way
they're born."