The Australian model hopes the image will make moms more comfortable about breastfeeding in public
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Supportive comments started trending on social media via hashtags #normalizebreastfeeding and # weareonlyhuman:
A lot of respect to goes to and for embracing motherhood and women s bodies! Such a gorgeous pic joanna (@joanna_xxox)
Others, however, think it was cowardly of Elle Australia to only make the cover available to subscribers. An example of the outraged on Elle Australia s Facebook page:
How sad you were not brave enough to use the image of a women s body at its most beautiful on all of your mags.
You re sending an incredibly negative message about the suitability of breastfeeding in public by choosing this image as a cover, yet only making it available to subscribers (ie only women). Yes, men will surely be offended by the photo, but 1) they don t buy your magazine and 2) THIS ATTITUDE IS WHAT WE NEED TO ELIMINATE IN SOCIETY!
Trunfio wrote that she is proud of the photo, taken by photographer Georges Antoni, hailing it as a positive and healthy statement:
There is nothing more powerful and beautiful than motherhood. The last thing I want to do is be controversial, so please take this for what it is, let us there is nothing worse than a mother that is judged for feeding her hungry child in public. I m so proud of this cover and what it stands for. I obviously don t look like this or wear [this] while I am breastfeeding but this stands for all women out there, whether you breastfeed or not, we gave birth, we are women, we are mothers.
It is the latest magazine cover of a breastfeeding mom to go viral, from Brad Pitt s photo of Angelina Jolie breastfeeding for the to a May 2012 TIME cover showing a mother breastfeeding her 3-year-old son, photographed by Martin Schoeller.相关的主题文章:
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