Iris Molenaar
The Armenian nose is a source of national pride, sometimes said to be
like the country’s impressive mountains: high, proud, and honest.
But what looks good in a landscape painting does not necessarily meet today’s global beauty standards. And increasingly, Armenians – especially young women – are opting for rhinoplasty in an effort to conform to the idealized Western appearance.
“As a country, we try to be Western, and this applies to the beauty standards, too,” said Kristina Grigoryan, who has practiced plastic surgery in Yerevan for 16 years. “We are still proud of being Armenians, but less proud of having such features.”
But what looks good in a landscape painting does not necessarily meet today’s global beauty standards. And increasingly, Armenians – especially young women – are opting for rhinoplasty in an effort to conform to the idealized Western appearance.
“As a country, we try to be Western, and this applies to the beauty standards, too,” said Kristina Grigoryan, who has practiced plastic surgery in Yerevan for 16 years. “We are still proud of being Armenians, but less proud of having such features.”
Armenia does not keep national statistics on it, but anecdotal evidence
suggests that the procedure is becoming more popular: Grigoryan’s clinic
performs about 500 nose jobs a year, up from 150 to 200 five years ago,
she said, and more and more clinics are offering the procedure.
The Armenian nose may be ancient, but the Armenian nose job is a recent
innovation. In the Soviet Union, plastic surgery was mostly restricted
to reconstructive cases. The massive 1988 earthquake in Armenia boosted
the demand for reconstructive plastic surgery, an expertise that doctors
later took advantage of to go into the cosmetic surgery business. “This
is how plastic surgery started to develop in Armenia,” said Karen
Danielyan, a plastic surgeon in Yerevan. “And now rhinoplasty is the
most popular and most common plastic surgery in Armenia – three out of
four operations are rhinoplasties.”
Danielyan is one of the pioneers of rhinoplasty in Armenia: in 2002, he
started the “Most Armenian Nose” competition, with the first prize being
a free nose job by the doctor himself. Back then, he said, the contest
was a publicity stunt to drum up business. Now, it is no longer
necessary to create awareness of the procedure. He estimates that he
does about 1,500 rhinoplasties per year, but the number is closely
dependent on the cyclical nature of the economy.
“If the [economic] situation is bad, there are fewer operations; if the
situation is good, there are many more operations,” he said. The recent
economic downturn has hurt, he said, “Now is not a good time for
Armenia. The economic situation is not very good, so not many people
have operations.”
But it is not only Armenian citizens who get nose jobs in Armenia. A
developed infrastructure and low costs (when compared to the West) have
facilitated a medical tourism boom, one driven mainly by demand for
plastic surgery. Raffi Elliott, CEO and co-founder of a medical package
tour company, gettreated.co, said that his clientele among the Armenian
Diaspora is disproportionately coming to get rhinoplasties.
For a nation with a strong sense of pride and national identity, the
trend to make the “Armenian nose” look less Armenian can seem
contradictory. Danielyan, who sports a humble nose himself, says that
these days people are more looking to get noses that suit their faces,
rather than simply copying the popular small, curved, Slavic noses.
However, he does continue to get many requests to recreate Angelina
Jolie’s nose, the most popular celebrity example when it comes to
rhinoplasty.
With nose surgeries becoming more accessible, accepted, and popular, is
there a danger of the “Armenian nose” disappearing? Danielyan laughed
and recalled a question he got from one of his patients: “If I get my
nose fixed, will my child get my new nose?”
A rhinoplasty does nothing to the genes, of course, so the characteristics are not likely to change, he explained.
Elliott, the medical tourism entrepreneur, also expressed his respect
for the emblematic feature: “I like the Armenian nose. It gives
character.”
And some Armenian women are bucking the trend: one pop singer, Silva Hakobyan, has shot down tabloid rumors that she plans to reduce her quintessentially Armenian nose, and says she is proud of her natural features.
Many women still worry that typically Armenian features may damage one’s
marriage prospects, Danielyan said, noting that the most common
rationale stated by his patients is the wish to find a partner. “If you
have a big nose, you won’t get married, and if you don’t marry, it’s not
good,” he said.
Rouben Abrahamyan, the winner of the inaugural Most Armenian Nose
competition – and its only male entrant – says he still feels bad for
his runner up. “She was very beautiful, but her big nose damaged her
appearance,” said Abrahamyan, a journalist and university lecturer in
Yerevan. He entered the contest because he had an injury to his nose
that caused difficulty breathing, and is glad to have that cleared up.
Still, he said, “I felt like changing places with her so that she could
have a better nose. In my case, it was just a medical treatment, but she
would look better with a smaller nose.”
eurasia.net (http://www.eurasianet.org/node/82931)
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