From Black Consciousness to Black Lives Matter: Confronting the colonial legacy of colourism in South Africa

Q4 Arts and Humanities AGENDA Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/10130950.2022.2166240
Simran Anjari
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Abstract

abstract The systems of oppression that plagued South Africa’s recent history worked on two distinct yet intertwined levels – race and colour – and as a result, colourism, or intra-racial discrimination, remains a complex phenomenon in the country. Colonial rule and racial segregation established a problematic relationship between skin colour and access to socio-economic opportunities and this not only encouraged a yearning for white skin (or light skin) among many Black, Coloured, and Indian South Africans, it also led to the emergence of a local, highly profitable skin-lightening industry. However, colourism and skin-lightening practices have been met with significant resistance: the Black Consciousness Movement raised public awareness on the dangers of skin-lightening practices and successfully pressured the South African Government to regulate the manufacturing and retailing of skin-lightening products in the country. More recently, the Black Lives Matter movement sparked global conversations on racism and other inequalities faced by Black people and other communities of colour. This article employs a Black feminist lens to trace the history of colourism and skin-lightening practices in South Africa and to highlight the importance of Black national and transnational activism in the fight against colourism and skin-lightening.
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从黑人意识到黑人的生命至关重要:直面南非肤色主义的殖民遗产
困扰南非近代史的压迫制度在两个不同但相互交织的层面上运作——种族和肤色——因此,肤色主义或种族内歧视在该国仍然是一种复杂的现象。殖民统治和种族隔离在肤色和获得社会经济机会之间建立了一种有问题的关系,这不仅鼓励了许多黑人、有色人种和印度裔南非人对白色皮肤(或浅色皮肤)的渴望,还导致了当地高利润的皮肤美白行业的出现。然而,肤色歧视和美白做法遭到了巨大的抵制:黑人意识运动提高了公众对美白做法危险性的认识,并成功地向南非政府施压,要求其监管该国美白产品的制造和零售。最近,“黑人的命也是命”运动引发了关于黑人和其他有色人种面临的种族主义和其他不平等问题的全球对话。本文采用黑人女权主义的视角来追溯南非肤色歧视和皮肤美白实践的历史,并强调黑人国家和跨国行动主义在反对肤色歧视和肤色美白方面的重要性。
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