On Being a Dark-Skinned Black Woman

In a piece for Clutch magazine, Sara Bivigou admits that while she wears her blackness with pride in many ways, she has a difficult relationship with it aesthetically. Suggested Reading Three Friends Were Headed To A Beyoncรฉ Concert, But One Dies On the Way. Guess What The Other Two Did Next? Our Fave Moments From…

In a piece for Clutch magazine, Sara Bivigou admits that while she wears her blackness with pride in many ways, she has a difficult relationship with it aesthetically.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

I donโ€™t care that Kevin Hart likes to make โ€˜jokesโ€™ that women the same colour as me have bad credit. Just as I didnโ€™t care that Lilโ€™ Wayne mused in โ€˜Right Above Itโ€™ that a certain black woman would โ€˜look better redโ€™. I donโ€™t care for Young Bergโ€™s pool test. Or that Tyrese believes going with the best means omitting black women. Or that Ne-Yo thinks โ€œall the prettiest kids are light skinned anywayโ€. Taken individually these slights seem too ridiculous to consider. I donโ€™t take them personally, I tut at them, I brush them off.

But when I think about what these single ideas add up to, of course I care. How could I not?

Iโ€™m crushed by caring. Because they perpetuate an understanding that to be a dark skinned woman is to be less. These ideas build themselves into assumptions and ways of treating women with as much melanin as me. I care because I already know dark skinned women are likely to receive longer prison sentences and less likely to get jobs when qualifications are equal. I care because too often our bodies are used as backdrops or props (i.e. Bella Padilla on the cover of FHM, โ€˜emerging from the shadowsโ€™). Think of how often you see women the same colour as me as surly, head rolling, loud-talking, finger-snapping comic relief (think Pam from Martin). I care because grotesque representations like Makode Aj Lindeโ€™s cake/performance art seem to be the only consistent representations of dark skinned black women. I also care about light skinned black women, who are women of colour too, and I do not want to continually feel set against them.

Read Sara Bivigou's entire piece at Clutch magazine.

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