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Home » The Beauty of Human Skin In Every Color: Angélica Dass (Transcript)

The Beauty of Human Skin In Every Color: Angélica Dass (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Angélica Dass’ talk titled “The Beauty of Human Skin In Every Color” at TED Talks 2016 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

A Family of Colors

ANGÉLICA DASS: It has been 128 years since the last country in the world abolished slavery, and 53 years since Martin Luther King pronounced his “I have a dream” speech. But we still live in a world where the color of our skin not only gives a first impression, but the lasting one that remains. I was born in a family full of colors. My father is the son of an aid from whom he inherited an intense dark chocolate tone. He was adopted by those who I know as my grandparents.

The matriarch, my grandma, has a porcelain skin and cotton-like hair. My grandpa was somewhere between vanilla and strawberry yogurt stone, like my uncle and my cousin. My mother is a cinnamon skin, daughter of a native Brazilian with a pinch of hazel and honey, and a man mix of coffee with milk, but with a lot of coffee. She has 2 sisters, 1 in a toasted peanut skin, and the other also adopted more on the beige side, like a pancake. Growing up in this family, color was never important for me.

Confronting Colorism

Outside home, however, things were different soon. Color had many other meanings. I remember my first drawing lessons in school as a bunch of contradictory feelings. It was exciting and creative, but I never understood the unique flesh color painting. I was made of flesh, but I wasn’t pink.

My skin was brown, and people said I was black. I was 7 years old with a mess of colors in my head. Later, when I took my cousin through school, I was usually taken for the nanny.