In Taiwan, a betel nut beauty or binglang girl (Chinese: ????; pinyin: b?nláng x?sh?; Pe?h-?e-j?: pin-nn?g se-si) is a young woman selling betel nuts and cigarettes from a brightly lit glass enclosure while wearing revealing clothing. The term in Chinese names the women after Xi Shi, the legendary beauty of imperial China's Spring and Autumn period. Though betel nuts are chewed in many regions of the Asia-Pacific, the betel nut beauty phenomenon is distinctly Taiwanese.
The original binglang girls were the "Shuangdong Girls" who, in the 1960s, brought glamour to the opening of the Shuangdong Betel Nut Stand in Guoxing Township, Nantou County. The success of the marketing strategy led competitors to follow suit, and by the end of the century binglang girls and their neon-topped kiosks were a trademark feature of Taiwan's cities and countryside. The kiosks appear in urban, suburban and rural settings alike.
As icons of Taiwanese culture, binglang girls appear frequently in art and film. Betelnut Beauty is the English title of a 2001 film, and betel nut beauties figure prominently in the 2007 art film Help Me, Eros. In 2016, director Tony Xue released his film Betelnut Girls, with lead actors Peggy Tseng and Paul Hsu.
Video Betel nut beauty
Definition and distribution
In a general sense, betel nut beauty refers to any female pinang (betel nut) saleswoman wearing seductive clothing.
Flamboyant pinang kiosks decorated with flashing neon lights are a common sight on the north-south highway in the west of Taiwan and on its suburban roads. The primary targeted customers are lorry drivers who use pinang to keep from dozing off in long-distance driving. Some shop owners started to hire girls dressed in sexy outfits to grab customers' attention in this highly profitable competition. Rivals followed suit. As the level of competition got higher, fewer clothes were worn by the female vendors.
Apart from being scantily clothed, some betel nut beauties also allowed customers to touch their bodies, putting them on a par with sex workers. However, this special kind of service was believed to be available only to customers who had purchased a certain amount of pinang.
Leaving aside the fear that these practices would generate crime, the presence of betel nut beauties also distracted drivers and caused more car accidents.
Maps Betel nut beauty
Taiwanese betel nut culture
Pinang refers to the seed of Areca catechu, or betel palm, which, like Cocos nucifera (or the coconut palm), belongs to Arecaceae (the palm family) and is a kind of evergreen tree whose trunk can grow as tall as twenty meters. The word pinang originated from Indonesian. Pinang was initially used as a kind of herbal plant, although in modern times it is mostly taken as a kind of pick-me-up.
Pinang chewing enjoys widespread popularity in Taiwan. It is conservatively estimated that over a hundred billion New Taiwan dollars are spent annually on this so-called "Taiwanese chewing gum" by the "red-lip clan" (people addicted to pinang chewing). According to the Council of Agriculture, as many as seventy farms have joined this lucrative pursuit by planting pinang trees, which makes pinang the most important economic crop in Taiwan since the 1990s. However, the upsurge of pinang planting causes problems with soil and water conservation on the hillside land. It was also found that the Taiwanese way of consuming pinang significantly enhances its potential to cause cancer. Although the cons far outweigh the pros, chewing pinang is still a prevailing custom in Taiwan. It is used by both the working class and professionals, by both men and women. Because of the high consumption values, vendors of pinang soon came to occupy every possible spot on the streets of Taiwan. Vigorous competition eventually led to the creation of "betel nut beauty" culture.
Controversy
Controversy surrounding betel nut beauties generally centers on two questions:
- the propriety of their revealing dress in public places and
- whether their dress marks them as victims of exploitation.
Betel nut beauties often hail from agricultural and working-class sectors of Taiwanese society. This has led some critics to regard their revealing dress as a sign of exploitation. Other observers, such as Josephene Ho, coordinator of the Center for the Study of Sexuality at National Central University, see betel nut beauties as self-empowering: young women with few resources who better their economic situation by employing a marketing technique that requires confidence.
Crackdown
In 2002, local governments in Taiwan started to impose laws or regulations covering the dress code of betel nut beauties, prohibiting the wearing of over-revealing clothes. Taipei city was the first to initiate the change. This was then followed by Taoyuan County (now Taoyuan City) and metropolitan cities like Taichung, Tainan, and Kaohsiung.
Some betel nut beauties are high school dropouts and their jobs represent the principal source of income for their families. Most have difficulty finding a job in a convenience store because they lack an educational qualification or because of age restriction; some choose to enter this profession for its higher pay.
See also
- Areca catechu
- Bikini barista
- Café con piernas
- Hooters
- Paan
- Red Envelope Club
References
- Translated from the equivalent article on the Chinese Wikipedia on 27 March 2008.
Further reading
- Magnier, Mark (22 January 2009). "Taiwan's 'betel nut beauties' drum up business, and debate". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
- Quartly, Jules (1 March 2007). "Bird-watching in Taiwan". Taipei Times. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
- Vembu, Venkatesan (30 January 2007). "The 'betel-nut beauties' of Taiwan". Daily News and Analysis. India. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
- Wang, Audrey (1 February 2008). "Betelnut Culture Turns Over a New Leaf". Taiwan Review. Archived from the original on 9 February 2012. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
External links
- Betelnut Beauties, An extensive Flickr photo set and discussion by Tobie Openshaw, who has been researching and documenting the girls for many years.
- [1], Illustrated TEDx talk on eight years of documenting the subject
Source of the article : Wikipedia