Zlokas, Rosemary E.2016-12-092016-12-092015-06-17vt_gsexam:5662http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73602My thesis looks at prescriptive beauty messages generated during 1940-1950 by using a case study of Margaret Morrison Carnegie College. I look at formal prescriptive beauty messages (advertisements, beauty manuals) and informal beauty messages (college yearbooks, newspapers, and beauty queen campaigns) to see what types of messages were created and why. I situate changes in these messages in a timeline of national culture, as it existed before, during, and after World War II. I then compare these messages by looking at which prescriptions were adapted by MMCC women as a group. I argue that these young women adopted an adapted version of the two prescriptions by following the advice given on a national level but also shaping their appearances based on what was occurring on campus. I infer that one set of prescriptions cannot exist in a vacuum; there will be a set of overarching goals to strive for, as well as a set based on standards within her immediate environment. The digital component to this project is available at www.consumingbeauty.com.ETDIn CopyrightBeauty CultureConsumer CultureEducation, HigherCollege WomenGenderCampus CultureBeauty QueensConsuming Beauty: The Impact of Prescriptive Beauty Literature on College Women, 1940-1950Thesis