Displaced looks: The lived experience of beauty and racismPosted in Articles, Caribbean/Latin America, Mexico, Social Science, Women on 2013-07-18 02:48Z by Steven |
Displaced looks: The lived experience of beauty and racism
Feminist Theory
Volume 14, Number 2, August 2013
pages 137-151
DOI: 10.1177/1464700113483241
Mónica G. Moreno Figueroa, Lecturer in Sociology
Newcastle University
With a focus on appearance and racialised perceptions of skin colour, this paper discusses the differences between being and feeling acceptable, pretty or ugly and the possibility of such displacement (from being to feeling or vice versa), as a way to understand what beauty does in people’s lives. The paper explores the fragility of beauty in relation to the visibility of the body in specific racialised contexts. It investigates the claim that beauty can be considered a feeling that emphasises processes (what beauty does) rather than contents (what beauty is). Drawing from life stories with Mexican women, I examine their concerns about visibility, temporality and appearance as expressions of racist practices and ideas, within a context where the racial project of mestizaje (racial mixture) is in operation. Beauty matters as it makes evident the pervasiveness of racism in the everyday. The lived experience of beauty, in its displacement and fragility, as a feeling and as resource, can also point to some of the strategies to resist, cope and get on.
Read or purchase the article here.