#women of color

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afroklectic: OXOSI — IN BLOOM featuring St. Beautyphotography Tyra Mitchellstyling Sakinah Sélaas toafroklectic: OXOSI — IN BLOOM featuring St. Beautyphotography Tyra Mitchellstyling Sakinah Sélaas toafroklectic: OXOSI — IN BLOOM featuring St. Beautyphotography Tyra Mitchellstyling Sakinah Sélaas to

afroklectic:

OXOSI — IN BLOOM featuring St. Beauty
photographyTyraMitchell
styling Sakinah Séla
as told by Kindra Moné


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by Hannah Giorgis

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(Photo Credit: NY Magazine)

It’s no secret that I am a Lupita Nyong’o fan girl. She is gorgeous, graceful, and certifiably ***flawless.

The actress gained worldwide attention for her heart-wrenching portrayal of the enslaved Patsey in Steve McQueen’s much-praised 12 Years A Slave. Having been thrust into the Hollywood spotlight only months ago, Lupita is notably reserved in the public eye—but her powerful presence speaks volumes about the ever-expanding ways in which Black women are complicating archaic notions about our femininity. 

Lupita’s Patsey is markedly different from both Mistress Epps, her master’s wife, and from Kerry Washington’s delicate Broomhilda in Django Unchained. Dark-skinned and long-suffering, Patsey is not afforded the benefit of Broomhilda’s damsel in distress rescue. It is, however, worth noting that both women were targets of sexual violence from the white men with power over them, neither of them immune to the Jezebel stereotype that deemed their black female bodies “unrapeable.”

In many ways, the logic we ascribed to black female bodies in the antebellum South still applies today. It has certainly changed to complement modernity, and yet myths that posit black women as simultaneously undesirableandhypersexual continue to pervade common narratives. We are either asexual, unfeminine mammyorbrazen whore—often forced into the latter category even as children.

Within these rigid confines, there has been little room to craft new models of Black femininity that do not get immediately recast into the old paradigms—expressions of androgyny signifying asexuality and hints of hyperfemininity becoming another visible sign of supposedly latent hypersexuality. Even progressive, beauty standard-challenging feminist blogs call pink-lipstick wearing, purple-haired black women “hard femme” based solely on our phenotypes. 

And yet Lupita Nyong’o embraces hyperfemininity so boldly that audiences, critics, and magazine editors alike all recognize she is a force to be reckoned with. With bright colors, sleek silhouettes, and bold necklines, she is taking the fashion world by storm. And people are noticing.

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(Photo Credit: US Weekly)

Lupita is a beacon of hope for every dark-skinned, natural-haired girl who grows up being told she looks like a boy, a challenge to the racist, cissexist claims that Black women’s short hair or musculature are inherently masculine. She is an inheritor of the modern legacy that First Lady Michelle Obama also occupies, an Afro-descendant fashion story woven together with palpable white envy.

Her adamantly delicate disposition flies directly in the face of both historic and contemporary falsehoods about Black women as inherently masculine, a quiet rebellion against the standards that pit white femininity as the unreachable standard against which all women must be measured. Her confidence is a powerful message that we need not reach toward the vanishing horizon of white femininity to be considered beautiful; Black women are ethereal on our own shores.

We have always been enough—and sometimes it’s nice to be reminded.

But what’s important isn’t just that Lupita is bursting onto the scene and expanding norms with visible markers of bold femininity. She may be one of few dark-skinned, short-haired women to occupy the national spotlight with feminine poise—but she is also the beneficiary of privileges that many other feminine-presenting dark-skinned women do not enjoy.

A graduate of Yale University School of Drama and daughter of middle-class Kenyan dignitaries, Lupita represents a “respectable” femininity that many low-income black women without her credentials cannot access. Though her demeanor does not make her wholly immune to racist assertions that she is uncouth or undeserving, she is largely shielded from this particular kind of classist misogynoir

That does not mean her influence is wholly inaccessible to all feminine-presenting Black women—or that the effects of her trailblazing femininity hold no meaning for low-income Black women. Rather, it is simply important to consider many aspects of how femininity are constructed and not pat ourselves on the back for addressing colorism in our analysis.

What does it mean that low-income Black women’s bodies are the first to be ridiculed, to be surveilled, to be sterilized? Meme after meme has come to popularity at the expense of Black women who stand outside the margins of acceptable femininity: who do not speak “standard” English, who do not work in “professional” environments, who do not have access to academia and certainly not the Academy.

Consider Rachel Jeantel, the key prosecutorial witness in the Trayvon Martin case. Both the hatred she received during the trial and the makeover she received after it suggested that her femininity as it stood was too much body and too little weave, too much immigrant and too little English. 

Lupita’s dark skin and short hair make her an anomaly in Hollywood’s feminine sphere, but not in the realm of Black femininity. If we are to celebrate the complex layers of Black femininity, we must not simply praise those exceptions whose femininity is highlighted in magazines for the world to see. We must re-envision beauty outside the context of white supremacist standards altogether.

What would it mean for young Black girls to grow up in a world where they didn’t need to speak the Queen’s English or afford designer clothes to be considered ladylike? What if we met young Black girls’ trends with adoration instead of labeling their aesthetic exploration ratchet (until it’s appropriated by more palatable white bodies)? What if we centered Black trans girls and affirmed their femininity from the moment they first express it? What if Black femininity could also validate Black bodies whose femininity is more complicated than our binaries recognize? 

Black femininity has always disregarded others’ boundaries—imagine what’s possible if we also dreamt beyond our own.

#pop culture    #women of color    #blackness    #femininity    

Color is beautiful on melanin

#women of color    #fashion    #black beauty    #melanin    

Hello June

#pam grier    #actress    #down blouse    #open blouse    #cleavage    #beautiful hair    #beautiful    #beautiful dress    #closed eyes    #women of color    #favorite    #necklace    

Details and links below:

http://www.womensfoundca.org/wpi

We’re accepting applications for the 2015–2016 Women’s Policy Institute (WPI) fellowship. Applications are due no later than Thursday, July 23, 2015 by 5:00 PM Pacific Time. Learn more >>

More effective than a single lobby group, the Women’s Policy Institute amplifies the voices of women who are leading grassroots social justice work, training them on how legislation is made and connecting them to those in power.

Through the Women’s Policy Institute, a yearlong program of training retreats in Sacramento, we teach women activists and grassroots organizations how to successfully navigate the labyrinth of Sacramento.

During the program, women work in teams to develop and implement specific policy advocacy projects of their choosing with a mentor who is experienced in public policy work. The Women’s Policy Institute has yielded tremendous success. In the first nine years, fellows have contributed significantly to the passage of twenty new laws in the areas of women’s health, safety and economic prosperity. And we’ve only just begun.

- See more at: http://www.womensfoundca.org/wpi#sthash.11TyxPZZ.dpuf

What in the ever loving fuck is wrong with some feminist. Like some “feminists” bost about wanting equality for ALL WOMEN and yet they bully disabled people, laugh at trans women and belittle poor women or women of color. But they brag about being feminists, you’re not a bloody feminist unless you stick up for all women regardless of how they look. This is an inclusive community and if they arent treating all women as equals then they dont stand for any of us and they’re no better than men that belittle women.

#lgbtq positivity    #women of color    #gay woman    #toxic people    #toxic feminism    #stand-up    #equal rights    #equality    #random rant    #sorry for the rant    #mini rant    #rant tag    #rant over    #conversation over    #gaypride    #feminizm    #feminist    #feminine    

‪The same event from two different points of view. We love pop perfection that declare cis women’s genitalia as powerful and associate them with omniscient beings.‬

Ziba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | RunvijZiba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka VirkPhotography | Runvij

Ziba by Devnaagri | Festive Pret 2019-20

Models | Aarti Rawat & Anoushka Virk

Photography | Runvijay Paul


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#indianfashion    #indiancouture    #indianwomen    #indianmodel    #indian    #devnaagri    #fashion    #couture    #photography    #women of color    #indianclothing    
ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT TO PITCH! Click through for submission guidelines and forms, and Happy Internationa

ONLY 3 DAYS LEFT TO PITCH! 

Click through for submission guidelines and forms, and Happy International Women’s Day. <3


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Present-time is right around the corner! Get your loved ones some queer, witchy comics before the 20

Present-time is right around the corner! Get your loved ones some queer, witchy comics before the 20th for shipping in time for Christmas! https://powerandmagicpress.com/collections/all


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#power magic    #power magic press    #comics    #witches    #demigirls    #trans women    #women of color    #people of color    #bigender    
Janelle Monae (2019)

Janelle Monae (2019)


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powerandmagic:Present-time is right around the corner! Get your loved ones some queer, witchy comics

powerandmagic:

Present-time is right around the corner! Get your loved ones some queer, witchy comics before the 20th for shipping in time for Christmas! https://powerandmagicpress.com/collections/all


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powerandmagic: The Ignatz Awards (the most prestigious award for independent comics) has nominated Ppowerandmagic: The Ignatz Awards (the most prestigious award for independent comics) has nominated P

powerandmagic:

TheIgnatz Awards (the most prestigious award for independent comics) has nominated POWER & MAGIC: The Queer Witch Comics Anthologyfor Outstanding Anthology of 2017. 

We are deeply honoredandhumbled to have our very first publication counted among this year’s nominees. Please let your friends who haven’t read the book know (or yourself if you’ve been waiting!) that we’ll be discounting all our products by 25% until the awards ceremony at SPX on September 16th!Just enter offer code IGNATZNOM at checkout! 

Thank you to everyone who’s read our book, shared it with friends, and expressed their love for queer witch comics around the world! Thank you for seeing us and helping us be seen!


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powerandmagic:That’s a wrap, everyone! Thank you all so much for your preorders, signal boosts, pres

powerandmagic:

That’s a wrap, everyone! Thank you all so much for your preorders, signal boosts, press coverage, and general hype for P&M Press’ second title!


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Ziwei Cao | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW| @vogue​(5/43 looks worn by WoC)

Ziwei Cao | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW

| @vogue​

(5/43 looks worn by WoC)


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Hyun Ji Shin | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW| @vogue​(5/43 looks worn by WoC)

Hyun Ji Shin | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW

| @vogue​

(5/43 looks worn by WoC)


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Monica Tomas | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW| @vogue​(5/43 looks worn by WoC)

Monica Tomas | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW

| @vogue​

(5/43 looks worn by WoC)


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Ziwei Cao | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW| @vogue​(5/43 looks worn by WoC)

Ziwei Cao | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW

| @vogue​

(5/43 looks worn by WoC)


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Hyun Ji Shin | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW| @vogue​(5/43 looks worn by WoC)

Hyun Ji Shin | Delpozo, Fall 2017 RTW

| @vogue​

(5/43 looks worn by WoC)


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