Read the following passage and answer the TWO questions that follow.
Beauty has an aesthetic, but it is not the same as aesthetics, not when it can be embodied, controlled by powerful interests, and when it can be commodified. Beauty can be manners, also a socially contingent set of traits. Whatever power decides that beauty is, it must always be more than reducible to a single thing. Beauty is a wonderful form of capital in a world that organizes everything around gender and then requires a performance of gender that makes some of its members more equal than others.
Beauty would not be such a useful distinction were it not for the economic and political conditions. It is trite at this point to point out capitalism, which is precisely why it must be pointed out. Systems of exchange tend to generate the kind of ideas that work well as exchanges. Because it can be an idea and a good and a body, beauty serves many useful functions for our economic system. Even better, beauty can be political. It can exclude and include, one of the basic conditions of any politics. Beauty has it all. It can be political, economic, external, individualized, generalizing, exclusionary, and perhaps best of all a story that can be told. Our dominant story of beauty is that it is simultaneously a blessing, of genetics or gods, and a site of conversion. You can become beautiful if you accept the right prophets and their wisdoms with a side of products thrown in for good measure. Forget that these two ideas—unique blessing and earned reward—are antithetical to each other. That makes beauty all the more perfect for our (social and political) time, itself anchored in paradoxes like freedom and property, opportunity and equality.
Based on the passage, which of the following BEST explains beauty to be simultaneously a “blessing” and a “site of conversion?”
Option D is the correct answer. In the passage, beauty is described as both a “blessing” (something inherent, perhaps genetic or divine) and a “site of conversion” (something that can be attained through effort, typically involving products and societal standards). This duality fits with the idea that beauty, though seen as a natural gift, is commodified and sold in capitalist society.
The "blessing" becomes something that people strive to achieve, and in doing so, they often rely on the "providers" — those who sell beauty products, offer beauty standards, or promote transformation. This connection between beauty as a blessing and a site of conversion, particularly in capitalism, is captured well in option D.
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