Psychology
Today, an academic journal that examines emerging thought
and literature in the field of psychology, published on
its website blog an article earlier this month that demonstrates
why we should be ever vigilant about assaults on human dignity
of Africans and African Americans that threatens to subjugate
the sociological standing in the society.
Satoshi
Kanazawa, a Japanese psychologist and controversial researcher,
wrote an article that was a purported study on anatomical
beauty traits, originally entitled, “Why Are Black Women
Less Physically Attractive Than Other Women?” After a swift
and quick public outcry, the title of the article was changed
to, “Why Are Black Women
Rated Less Attractive Than Other Women, While Black Men
Rated More Attractive Than Other Men?” When you start manipulating
the title of the study, you kinda know the manipulation
doesn’t stop there.
Psychology
Today’s website finally pulled the article down (after less
than a week) but the public discourse doesn’t end there.
(Editor’s note: The website buzzfeed.com captured the article
before it was taken down and you can click here
to read the original.)
While
we can (and will) talk about this as being yet another opportunity
to assault the self-esteem and dignity of black women directly,
and the intelligence and sensibilities of the public, we
can’t address this without addressing the anti-intellectualism
being presented as intellectualism and faux science being
presented as real science.
While
beauty and the perceptions of beauty have been studied before,
in the context of how people react to beauty versus those
not deemed beautiful (life chances, job hires, date encounters,
marriages, etc.), this study seeks to stratify beauty in
a racial context, and specifically justify its premise and
its outcome as to why black women are “less attractive”
than white or Asian women. Studies like this have a history
rooted in cultural ignorance and racism. But there is something
to be read into this. Pseudo science always has an end game.
Kanazawa’s
racial categorizations, which excludes Latin women and includes
Native American women, seeks to analyze aspects of physical
attractiveness to support his study’s conclusions. Race
is a social construct formulated out of dominant cultural
norms and preferences.
Beauty
is also a subjective social construct based on dominant
cultural norms and preferences. In America, Eurocentric
values have always dominated social norms and preferences.
Africans who have come to America, and those of African
lineage born in America have always been subjected to artificial
standards of beauty that sought to juxtapose them against
distorted imagery to contrast black and white social acceptance.
The distortion of African Americans imagery in American
society might to exclude them from the social mainstream.
Anatomical
and genealogical studies were done in the 19th and 20th
Century to justify keeping blacks in a subordinated socio-economic
standing. We are well acquainted with the Social Darwinism
of the 19th Century that sought to racialize anatomy and
the Bell Curve studies of the 20th Century that sought to
racialize intelligence, both subtle and not so subtle attempts
to justify racial stigmatization of Blacks. While racism
has always been economic, social stigmatization was the
most effective way of mainstreaming popular thought around
subjectively held views.
No
matter what stage of American history we’ve reached, black
or “exotic” beauty has been a norm. Pre-slavery, during
slavery, post slavery, the beauty of black women and the
allure that black women have on all men, is unquestioned.
Black women have always set a high standard for beauty and
played a key role in evolving fashion. What is attractive
has no contradiction, and distinctions of beauty are according
to personal preference.
Comparative
beauty has no standing, as it is a relative truth depending
on the “eye of the holder.” However, to try to aggregate
beauty and say that black women in the aggregate as less
attractive than any other group of women is fake science
and a distortion of the greatest measure. Or as the late
African American feminist UC Berkeley scholar, Barbara Christian
once stated in the documentary, Ethnic Notions, “the
continuing distortion of the black image not only becomes
laughable, but grotesque.” This attempt to reframe beauty
through some new global “academic” lense is not only laughable,
but grotesque, as the subjects of Kanazawa’s study are essentially
a less preferred reflection of his own distorted world view.
He thinks Black women are less attractive and seeks to pass
it off as science.
Kanazawa
also wrote a “study” entitled, “Beautiful People Are REALLY
More Intelligent.” Ironically, in Kanazawa’s study, the
women with the highest beauty ratings are Asians. So, you
see where this is going on here, and a case could be made
that fake science is being used to justify a shift in beauty
norms, in terms of the construction of Asian beauty and
emergence of China as a dominant cultural influence. So,
instead of Kanazawa having to justify a less plausible conclusion
of why his study sees Asian women more beautiful than all
other women (an equally extremely outrageous assertion -
can you imagine a study entitled “Asian Women More Attractive
Than All Other Women” and how quickly and easily that would
have be debunked?), he simply has to defend a less concrete
conclusion as to why black women are less attractive. Neither
is a defensible conclusion because of the subjectivity and
relativism of both the observer and the observed. His data
is not presented, nor does he present a hypothesis that
is tested.
It’s
a survey that’s easy to pass off on a dumbed down society
that uses Wikipedia and internet blurbs as the basis for
their knowledge. Kanazawa’s study is called junk science
in academic circles, and Psychology Today should
have never allowed it to be posted as a scientific study.
Pseudo
race studies only seek to justify or substantiate a position
in the construct to either elevate one segment, or denigrate
another segment. That’s the reason for them. This is just
the 21st Century version of social Darwinism. There is no
greater stratification of beauty than that presented by
black women. I don’t need a study to say that, or science
to prove it. Like Kanazawa’s study, it’s a relative truth
that no one can really refute.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad,
is a national columnist, managing director of the Urban Issues Forum and author ofSaving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website isAnthonySamad.com.
Click here to contact Dr. Samad.
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