Boston Sunday Globe

Shifting our understand­ing of beauty in ‘Flawless’

- Abigail Lee can be reached at abigail.lee@globe.com. Find her on Twitter @abigail_jlee.

In her book, “Flawless: Lessons in Looks and Culture from the K-Beauty Capital,” Elise Hu recounts giving birth in South Korea and having a midwife constantly conceal her with a blanket. Hu detected that despite the urgency of labor, a certain bodily discomfort in Korean culture endured.

“I had this very quick and rather darkly funny lesson in how the female body was something to be ashamed of or needed to be prettified,” Hu said.

Hu led NPR’s first Seoul bureau from 2015 to 2018, reporting on everything from missile provocatio­ns to political summits to a landmine explosion. But one area she didn’t cover as frequently affected her day-to-day life: Korean beauty culture. As she navigated the country pregnant or postpartum, Hu encountere­d a restrictiv­e social atmosphere shaped by beauty ideals on which she eventually focused her journalist­ic eye.

“Flawless” unpacks those personal experience­s in a larger examinatio­n of K-beauty. Hu writes about the exacting, high-tech beauty culture and how countless companies offer products to hydrate, soften, and illuminate in scientific­ally innovative ways. But the abundance of options also funnels into “lookism” (appearance-based discrimina­tion) and a “technologi­cal gaze” of algorithm-driven beauty standards, according to Hu.

Hu, who now lives in Los Angeles and is the host of the podcast “TED Talks Daily,” embarked on the book once she returned to the US. Hu is Chinese and Taiwanese American and does not speak Korean, but she worked with interprete­rs, researcher­s, and fact-checkers to create an accurate view of K-beauty, finding hundreds of sources in Korean women from ages 7 to 73.

Hu wanted to explore the “paradox of physical beauty” — how cosmetics can feel like both self-care and a neverendin­g “hustle” of maintenanc­e — and ultimately learned that beauty can’t be reduced to appearance. She asked her sources, “What does beauty mean to you?”

The answers were expansive and shaped how Hu thinks about beauty.

“Beauty is not limited to physical beauty,” she said. “It is not limited to aesthetic [beauty], and the beauty that we should search for is actually rather spiritual.”

Elise Hu will be in conversati­on with Cristela Guerra at 7 p.m. Tuesday, June 20, at Porter Square Books.

 ?? DAVID WILSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ??
DAVID WILSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE

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