Emily Ratajkowski was born in 1991, is a famous American supermodel . She entered the entertainment world at the age of 14 and quickly affirmed her multi-faceted talent, achieving much success in the fields of modeling, film and business.
Currently, Emily Ratajkowski owns a personal Instagram page with more than 30 million people, is the owner of her own fashion brand and is sought after by many magazines and brands. In addition, the beauty also participated in famous film projects such as "Gone Girl".
In her memoir "My Body", Emily Ratajkowski used her career as a model and actress as a premise for discussion. Throughout the twelve chapters of the book, she opened up about her experiences of having her body control violated.
For the first time, the female model published details of her story of being harassed during the filming of the music video with more than 800 million views "Blurred Lines", hidden transactions between rich people and models, or being harassed by photographers. blatantly selling my photos...
Through that, Emily Ratajkowski frankly questioned the institutions and social stereotypes that govern women's right to control their bodies: Who has the right to define beauty? Who has the right to determine a woman's body image? What role does the media play in controlling common standards of beauty?...
The work offers the author's candid insight into the tendency of women to internalize prejudices of patriarchal society in different stages and generations, like how a mother teaches her child about beauty. , how women compare attraction and beauty with each other...
From there, it can be seen that women themselves are deeply ingrained with the prejudices of patriarchal society and unconsciously give the right to define their beauty and value to men.
Through her work, Emily Ratajkowski wants to remind women of their right to freely determine their bodies. At the same time, the beauty calls on everyone to end the ideology of discrimination and discrimination against women that still exists in today's society.
As soon as it was released, "My Dear" entered the New York Times Bestseller list and received many compliments from major magazines. The book is a bold, straightforward indictment of the factors that turn women into trivial goods and reaffirms that: "Women's value must be determined by themselves."