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Beaded
earrings are jewelry attached to the ear through a piercing
in the earlobe or some other external part of the ear
(except in the case of clip beaded earrings, which clip onto
the lobe). Earrings are worn by both sexes. In western
cultures, beaded earrings have traditionally been worn
primarily by women, although in recent decades, ear piercing
has also become popular among men in North America, Europe,
Asia and Africa.
Common locations for piercings, other than the earlobe,
include the rook, tragus, and across the helix. The simple
term “ear piercing” usually refers to an earlobe piercing,
whereas piercings in the upper part of the external ear are
often referred to as “cartilage piercings.” Cartilage
piercings are more complex to perform than earlobe piercings
and take longer to heal.
Earring components may be made of any number of materials,
including metal, plastic, glass, precious stones, beads, and
other materials. Designs range from small loops and studs to
large plates and dangling items. The size is ultimately
limited by the physical capacity of the earlobe to hold the
earring without tearing. However, heavy earrings worn over
extended periods of time may lead to stretching of the
earlobe and the piercing.
Ear piercing is one of the oldest known forms of body
modification, with artistic and written references from
cultures around the world dating back to early history. One
of the early signs of earrings worn by men are from
Persepolis in ancient Persia, the carved images of the
soldiers from various parts of the Persian Empire which are
displayed on some of the surviving walls of the palace
showing the soldiers wearing an ear ring.
Another equally early evidence of earring wearing took place
in the Bible record of Exodus written by Moses in the
wilderness; the second book of the Bible. In Exodus 32:1-4
Moses is still up in the mountain, so the complaining
Israelites demand that Aaron make a god for them. So he
tells them to bring their sons and daughters earrings to him
so that he may comply with their demand. (Written in 1532
B.C.E.) 15:18 29, July 2009
Pierced ears were popular in the United States through the
early 1900s, then fell into disfavor among women due to the
rising popularity of clipped-on earrings. Nevertheless, a
small male following continued to exist, particularly among
sailors, for whom a pierced earlobe often meant that the
wearer had sailed around the world or had crossed the
equator.[1] In addition, if a non-service member sailor was
involved in and survived a sinking ship, they were often
seen wearing an earring in the left ear. There was also a
long-held belief that puncturing the earlobe was beneficial
to increasing the acuity of eyesight or of hearing. Also, it
was a common belief amongst sailors that if their ship
wrecked and their bodies washed up on a shoreline, the
person to find them would take the earring as payment for a
proper burial. This practice predates Christianity, albeit
later adapted to "a proper christian burial", and dates to
ancient Greece where the gold paid the ferryman (Charon) to
provide passage across the river Acheron into the realm of
Hades, since a sailor might lose his coins when washed
overboard at sea. It is because of this belief that many
sailors invested quite a bit of money on gold earrings, as
they were very superstitious.
At that time, the practice re-emerged, but since a large
commercial market for them did not exist, most ear piercings
were done at home. Teenage girls were known to hold ear
piercing parties, where they performed the procedure on one
another. Such an event is depicted in the 1978 motion
picture Grease (set in 1959), where Sandy (Olivia
Newton-John), the leading lady, is pierced by her friends.
Pairs of earrings for sale at a roadside stand in Costa
Rica. Ear piercing became commonly available in physician
offices. Some of the earliest commercial, non-medical
locations for getting an ear piercing appeared in the 1970s
at Manhattan jewelry stores, although the overall commercial
market was still in its infancy. By the 1980s, ear piercing
was common among many women, thus creating a broader market
for the procedure. Department stores throughout the country
would hold ear piercing events, sponsored by earring
manufacturers. At these events, a nurse or other trained
person would perform the procedure, either pushing a
sharpened and sterilized starter earring through the earlobe
by hand, or using an ear-piercing instrument modified from
the design used by physicians.
In the late 1960s, ear piercing began to make inroads among
men through the hippie and gay communities. In the late
1970s, amateur piercings, sometimes with safety pins and/or
multiple piercings, became popular in the punk rock
community. By the 1980s, the trend for male popular music
performers to have pierced ears helped establish a fashion
trend for men. This was later adopted by many professional
athletes. British men started piercing both ears in the
1980s; George Michael of Wham! was a prominent example. The
heavily jeweled Mr. T was an early example of an American
celebrity wearing earrings in both ears, although this trend
did not become popular with mainstream American men until
the 1990s.
In various Western cultures, piercing the left vs. the right
ear alone has sometimes been popularly perceived to be
associated with a particular sexual orientation. In the late
60s it was said that "left is right, and right is wrong,"[2]
alluding to social prejudices surrounding sexual
orientation. The left ear was reserved for piercing by
straight men and a pierced right ear meant that one was gay.
Recent consensus is that no ear is currently associated with
sexual orientation.
Multiple piercings in one or both ears first emerged in
mainstream America in the 1970s. Initially, the trend was
for women to wear a second set of earrings in the earlobes,
or for men to double-pierce a single earlobe. Asymmetric
styles with more and more piercings became popular,
eventually leading to the cartilage piercing trend.
A variety of specialized cartilage piercings have since
become popular. These include the tragus piercing,
antitragus piercing, rook piercing, industrial piercing,
helix piercing, orbital piercing, daith piercing, and conch
piercing. In addition, earlobe stretching, while common in
indigenous cultures for thousands of years, began to appear
in Western society in the 1990s, and is now a fairly common
sight. However, these forms of ear piercing are still
infrequent compared to standard ear piercing.
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