Quickly she said, ‘Oh black women have thin legs’. I was
left speechless and froze. There are times when saying nothing helps but I am still laughing at the level of ignorance around.
Now I am sure you have all heard or are familiar with the
phrases, ‘She doesn’t have a body like a normal black girl’, ‘why don’t you
have a big bum?’ or even, ‘where is your bum?!’ These are just a few examples
of typical everyday comments and questions that are casually thrown into the
mix when addressing and policing what is perceived to be the average body of a
black woman.
Now before I begin, I am in no way discrediting any one type
of body, and this entire article hopes to shed light on the fact that the way
we look does not articulate who we are in any way, shape or form. There is a
common association with what I like to coin, ‘the African physique’, and the
way many view that black women’s bodies should be built.
Like many things of African origin, favourable parts of this
physique have been borrowed and merged into popular Western culture for the
purposes of exploitation and reinvention. But before I draw off track, allow me
to elaborate on what this has to do with the way that we police black women’s
bodies.
In addition, with the integration of hip hop culture into
popular culture, all of a sudden we are seeing the African physique along with
its appraisal being thrust into the lime light, and hurled into our faces, and
on to our screens at a thousand miles per hour , what with the Kim Kardashian
etc! All of a sudden the whole world has
once again gone absolutely mad for women with large derrieres!
Now where does this leave my argument? Well being constantly
bombarded with images in the media of what a certain type of black woman looks
like, only propels the notion that there is a standardized look that all black
women should aspire to measure up to. If we are viewing this from a purely
biological standpoint, the African physique no longer encapsulates the frame of
black women on a larger scale.
Considering the variation of the Diaspora, centuries of
multi-culturalism, migration, slavery and colonization, the genetic make-up of
black women’s bodies has changed. In other terms, the women that we perceive to
be black women, are not necessarily restricted to women of African origin
alone.
This does not mean that every woman of African origin
automatically inherits this physique, but you can imagine how the scale of
inheritance is ever fluctuating and complex. There has existed a long standing
stereotype and association among the way that society views black women and the
certain behavioural, or physical attributes that they should possess.
Get it.
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