For a Black Girl

hi

my name is crystal oli i’m a 17 year old

immigrant from nigeria

i moved here with my family when i was

six years old

now that’s a pretty special age to move

to a new country

i wasn’t old enough to find the

adjustment to canadian societal norms

too difficult yet i wasn’t young enough

to forget nigeria as a whole either

actually i remember my life there quite

clearly before we moved

six is such a unique age to move to a

new country because

i can easily remember how different the

people in the two countries

looked in nigeria the majority

if not all of the people i personally

had come across were black

so when i moved to canada and that

wasn’t the case i wasn’t necessarily

shocked per se

i mean i had been watching western

television

i was however under the illusion that my

blackness

would not influence my development i

mean why would i ever consider

that me being black would pose any

problem

i’d never been exposed to racism so as

far as i was concerned

my blackness and my classmates whiteness

were akin to us having different hair

colors

different yes significant no

so like many other people of color i

began to have social experiences that

made me

hyper aware of my race it’s different

for everyone

for some people they get looked at funny

in high-end stores because

how could someone of that color possibly

afford something so expensive

for others they got completely ignored

in academic settings because

someone of their color couldn’t possibly

have anything constructive to contribute

to the conversation

but for me it was being told that i’m

pretty for a black girl

when i was 13 years old now this might

not sound too bad initially i mean

they had just called me pretty right

wrong

i soon learned that this was not a

compliment at all

as the second part of that statement

turned the sentence from

i appreciate how you look too despite

your skin color you

somehow managed to turn out okay looking

and while that may not comparatively

have had an immediately detrimental

effect as say

racial profiling or being neglected in

academic settings

for a 13 year old girl who was just

becoming more conscious

of physical appearance and beauty

standards what comments like that did

was perpetuate a social ideal that we

have all subconsciously come to accept

to some extent

now this experience is not unique to

just me

in fact as i get older i have realized

just how common

compliments like these are i also

noticed that they seem to be especially

reserved

for girls with darker skin who have

smaller noses

colored eyes thinner lips etc what

society generally considers

to be eurocentric features now i use the

term eurocentric with a bit of

hesitation

and hopefully by the end of me standing

here and talking for the next few

minutes

you’ll come to see why now to understand

why the stipulation for a woman of color

is so often added to compliment about

appearance when it comes to women of

color

i first looked at the usual suspects the

media

and i’m talking about all types of media

broadcast

print support media and of course social

media

i mean this idea that race somehow

defines the limit to which someone can

be beautiful

they just fall out of thin air in the

middle of the 21st century

it had to have come from somewhere so

while present-day media can be shown to

clearly be uplifting one race as the

beauty standard

the same can be said for historical

media

right now beauty standards are

perpetuated by social media

and print media like magazines for

example but a few years ago the message

was spread by public advertisement

posters

on every street corner and even before

then well

it was books all these things have

influenced the thought process of the

general public through the years

to give us a visual representation or a

literal description

of what beautiful is now when someone

wants to explain the theory of evolution

they usually start from the past and

work their way to the present

we’re going to apply the same method

here and see if we can fully understand

why women of color always find

themselves being complimented

in backhanded ways that imply that

finding beauty in our race

is something outlandish don’t worry

i won’t bore you all with an intricate

history lesson dating back to the 1400s

about the

development of beauty ideals i will

however

mention writers like christoph meaners

who is a dedicated practitioner

of scientific racism through his works

including a book by the title

the outline of history of mankind he

breaks down mankind into two

distinct groups beautiful in white

and ugly and black this is a perfect

example

of how the idea that there is a superior

race

was and is perpetuated through the media

you might ask yourself

why in the world was something like this

a lot to be published

well it was published because those who

had the authority to do so

had similar ideals concerning white

racial superiority

and they were not just regular people

they were rich

they were powerful they were white and

they were racist

and they had a clear understanding that

we as human beings tend to

associate beauty with goodness and value

as well as other positive

connotations hence their decision that

beauty simply could not be associated

with darker-skinned people

this is understandable considering that

practices like slavery worked

specifically to dehumanize black people

thus publishing words that worked to

further dehumanize people of color

reduce the threats to white superiority

by solidifying that

no other race should be put at the same

or at a higher level

as the white majority now moving forward

through time

we still see this idea that black people

are not to be considered beautiful

being pushed forth through media such as

plays in the early to mid 1800s

which would use blackface to

hyperbolically represent the features of

black people

likening us to monkeys gorillas and

other

similar animals in the late 1900s though

we start to see the usage of the term

pretty for a black girl

kelly golf writes in an article

published by the cuts about the first

black supermodel dania luna while

recognized for her undeniable fierceness

and elegance

luna still found herself having to hide

the features which made her

too obviously black and present only her

eurocentric features

in her first cover for harper’s bazaar

her race was intentionally covered as

the cover was done

in the form of a sketch which prevented

her skin color from being too obvious

canadian author alicia liu writes about

how the recent representation of darker

skinned women in the beauty

pageant world has opened the floor to

discussions

about featurism and colorism in that

industry

the first black miss america vanessa

williams yes

very beautiful but many have argued that

women with what may be considered

traditionally black features may have

potentially been met with more racially

driven

criticism than she was because of the

idealization of eurocentric features

that exist

in our society and how well her features

allow her to fit

into that ideal while i in no way am

intending to

discredit the prejudice and racism these

two women undoubtedly faced

reading about them did reveal something

to me i realized that while these women

are both black they were featured for

their european resembling features

as this is what deemed their ability to

be accepted in the western media

as beautiful why well because like i

said

the teachings of christophe mieners and

many others like him

didn’t just filter themselves out

through time they became

better hidden more subtle more incognito

more

subconscious in our media i noticed that

the western world has a skill for having

his cake and eating it too

the best way to claim yourself to be a

progressive nation

while also maintaining your inherently

racist ideals

is to show representation in the media

but we often find that that

representation still somehow

uplifts eurocentricism by dismissing and

oftentimes

demonizing colored women whose features

are similar to those mocked during the

jim crow era

bigger noses larger lips big eyes these

features were and still

are being looked at as less than

beautiful but black women whose features

conform to the eurocentric ideal such as

having a small

and straight nose and everything else i

already mentioned are seen as beautiful

enough now i can see why people

racialize their comments

what stipulations like for a black girl

implied to me is that although your skin

color lowers your score on the beauty

scale

your eurocentric features bring you back

up as they can easily be associated back

to those shared among slider races

i don’t think i speak too bluntly when i

say that this is

a bad thing the blaring truth is that

there are no such things as eurocentric

or

traditionally black features if they are

on my face

and i am black then for me they are

black features

if a white woman happens to have a

larger nose she’s not said to have

african features she simply said to have

a larger nose

futurism exists it is deeply rooted in

racist ideals

and it is damaging not only to the black

community

not only to the brown community but to

our society as a whole

it blinds us to the abstract nature of

beauty giving us all

tunnel vision to what we are allowed to

find attractive

if nothing else i have said today stays

with you all please remember this

beauty is too abstract a word to be

defined it is too vast to be compressed

into one race

so when you leave here today when you

stop watching this video

look for someone who doesn’t look like

you look for someone whose beauty you

see

regardless of what the societal

definition of the word is

and remind them that they are beautiful

because they are

and you are too thank you

you

嗨,

我的名字是水晶奥利,我是一名 17 岁

的尼日利亚移民

,我 6 岁时和家人一起搬到这里,

现在这是搬到新国家的一个非常特殊的年龄,

我还没有长大到无法

适应 对加拿大的社会规范

来说太难了,但我还没有年轻到

可以忘记整个尼日利亚

两个国家的人

看起来在尼日利亚,

如果不是我个人

遇到的所有人都是黑人,那么大多数人都是黑人,

所以当我搬到加拿大时,

情况并非如此,我本身并不一定

感到震惊,

我的意思是我曾经 然而,看西方

电视时,

我有一种幻觉,即我的

黑人

不会影响我的发展

y 黑人和我的同学们 白人

类似于我们 有不同的头发

颜色

不同 是 很重要

不 就像许多其他有色人种 我

开始有社交经历,这

让我

对我的种族有高度的认识

对于某些人来说,每个人都不同

在高端商店里很有趣,因为

那种肤色的人怎么可能

买得起别人这么贵的东西

,他们

在学术环境中完全被忽视了,因为

他们肤色的人不可能

有任何建设性的东西

来为谈话做出贡献,

但对我来说,这是 告诉我

在我 13 岁的时候很适合一个黑人女孩,现在这听起来可能

还不错,我的意思是

他们只是说我是对的,

我很快就知道这根本不是

恭维,

因为第二部分 那句话

改变了这句话,

我很欣赏你的样子,尽管

你的肤色你

设法变得很好看

,虽然这可能

对于一个刚刚

变得更加

注重外貌和美貌

标准的 13 岁女孩来说,种族定性或在学术环境中被忽视,这样的评论并没有

立即产生不利影响,这样的评论使我们所有人都拥有的社会理想永存

下意识地在某种程度上接受

现在这种经历并不是我独有

的,事实上,随着年龄的增长,我已经意识到

像这样

的赞美是

多么普遍 鼻子有

颜色的眼睛更薄的嘴唇等等

社会普遍认为的

以欧洲为中心的特征现在我

有点犹豫地使用了欧洲中心这个词

,希望在我站在

这里和接下来的几分钟谈话时

你会明白为什么现在要 了解

为什么在谈到有色人种女性时,对有色人种女性的规定

如此频繁地被用来称赞

外表

颜色

我首先看的是通常的嫌疑人

媒体

,我说的是所有类型的媒体

广播

印刷支持媒体当然还有社交

媒体

我的意思是种族以某种方式

定义了一个人可以

变得美丽

的极限

在 21 世纪中叶

,空气稀薄,它必须来自某个地方,因此,

虽然可以证明当今的媒体

明显提升了一个种族作为

美容标准,

但历史媒体也可以这样说,

现在美容标准

由 社交媒体

和印刷媒体,例如杂志,

但几年前,这条

信息通过每个街角的公共广告

海报传播,甚至在此之前,

这些东西都是书籍,所有这些东西多年来

影响了公众的思维过程

当有人想解释进化论时,给我们一个视觉表示或文字描述现在的美丽

他们通常会从 f 回顾过去并

努力工作到

现在 不用担心,

我不会用

可追溯到 1400 年代的

关于

美丽理想发展的错综复杂的历史课让

大家感到厌烦,但是我会提到像克里斯托夫·米纳斯这样的作家

,他是

科学种族主义的忠实实践者,他的作品

包括一本书 标题

人类历史的轮廓 他

将人类分为两个

不同的群体,美丽的白色

、丑陋和黑色 这是一个完美的

例子

,说明存在优越种族的想法是如何

通过媒体延续下来的,

你可能会问自己

为什么 世界上有这么

多东西要出版,

它出版是因为那些

有权这样做的人

有类似的理想 ng 白人

种族优越

,他们不仅仅是普通人,

他们很富有,

他们很强大,他们是白人,

他们是种族主义者

,他们清楚地认识到,

我们人类倾向于

将美与善良和价值

以及其他积极的

内涵联系起来 他们认为

美丽根本不能

与肤色较深的人联系起来,

这是可以理解的,因为

像奴隶制这样的做法

专门使黑人非人化,

因此发表的言论

进一步使有色人种非人化,通过巩固没有其他人的

优势来减少对白人优越感的威胁

种族应该与

现在随着时间的推移而前进的白人多数处于相同或更高的水平,

我们仍然看到这样一种想法,即

黑人不应该被认为是美丽的

,这种想法是通过媒体推动的,例如

1800 年代初至中期的戏剧

会用blackface来

双曲线地表示

黑人

比拟的特征 在 1900 年代后期将我们带到猴子大猩猩和

其他

类似动物中,尽管

我们开始看到黑人女孩“漂亮”一词的用法

凯莉高尔夫在一篇由剪辑发表的文章中写道,该文章

讲述了第一位

黑人超模达尼亚·卢娜(dania luna),虽然

她的不可否认性得到了认可 凶猛

和优雅的

卢娜仍然发现自己不得不

隐藏那些让她

太明显的黑人特征,并且

在她为时尚芭莎的第一个封面中

只展示了

她以欧洲为中心的特征 肤色过于明显

加拿大作家 alicia liu 写道

,最近

在选美界中深色皮肤女性的表现如何

为该行业的特征主义和色彩主义开启了讨论的大门

第一位黑人美国小姐 vanessa

williams 是的,

非常漂亮,但很多

认为具有

传统黑人特征的女性可能有

由于我们社会中存在的以

欧洲为中心的特征的理想化,

以及她的特征

使她能够很好地

融入这一理想,我可能会受到比她更多的种族驱动的批评,而我绝不

打算

抹黑这两个偏见和种族主义

毫无疑问,女性在

阅读有关她们的文章时确实向我透露了一些信息

,我意识到,虽然这些女性

都是黑人,但她们的特色是

具有欧洲相似的特征,

因为这就是认为她们

在西方媒体中被接受的能力是

美丽的,为什么好吧,因为就像我

说的

christophe mieners 和

许多其他像他

一样的人的教义不仅仅是

随着时间的推移而过滤掉他们变得

更好隐藏更微妙更隐姓埋名

在我们的媒体中更潜意识我

注意到西方世界也有一种技巧

来吃他的蛋糕

声称自己是一个

进步的国家,

同时又保持你固有的

种族主义理想

的最佳方式是 o 在媒体上展示代表性,

但我们经常发现,这种

代表性仍然以某种方式

提升了欧洲中心主义,

因为这些女性的特征与吉姆克劳时代相似,并且经常妖魔化有色女性

不那么

漂亮但黑人女性的特征

符合欧洲中心主义的理想,

比如鼻子小

而直,我

已经提到的其他一切都被认为

足够漂亮了

对我的暗示是,虽然你的肤色会

降低你在美容量表上的分数,但

你以欧洲为中心的特征会让你重新振作

起来,因为它们可以很容易地与

滑块比赛中共享的那些相关联

一件坏事 显而易见的事实是,

没有像欧洲中心

传统上的黑人 fe 这样的事情 如果它们

在我的脸上

并且我是黑人,那么对我来说它们是

黑色的特征

如果一个白人女性碰巧有一个

更大的鼻子她没有说

她有非洲人的特征她只是说有

一个更大的鼻子

未来主义存在它根深蒂固

种族主义理想

,它不仅损害黑人

社区,

不仅损害棕色社区,而且损害

我们整个社会

我说过今天

和你们在一起请记住这个

美丽太抽象了一个无法定义的词

它太大而无法压缩

成一场比赛

所以当你今天离开这里时当你

停止观看这个视频时

寻找一个看起来不像的人 就像

你寻找一个你看到的美丽的人,

不管这个词的社会定义是什么,

并提醒他们他们是美丽的,

因为他们是

,你太谢谢你