Cosmetically-enhanced beauty is something that has existed for
centuries. Over the course of the last century, however, a cosmetics
industry has arisen that is worth millions. Its products claim to
optimize visual appearance, to bestow inner and outer health and to
delay aging, under a veneer of medical credibility and reliable results.
The referential frame for cosmetics is constituted by cultural history
and iconology, by semiotics and sociology, by psychology and rhetoric.
Like fashion, it has called into being a linguistic system of
considerable depth and complexity; one that draws its subtexts from
futurology and history, from medicine and alchemy, from nostalgia and
from heritage preservation. This book exposes the rhetorical system
behind the promises of cosmetics in terms of the histories of cultures
and of mentalities, analyzing the verbal/visual messages of selected
examples.