• Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 hours ago

      If you have never actually seen a person with dark skin that’s how you might imagine one. Or so I did when I was a kid, growing up in a bunghole village in the impenetrable forests up in northern europe where the darkest skin I’d seen was that greek girl (not very dark at all).

      My friend is also charcoal black, so that’s definitely a possibility too, human skin is amazing, it can be black-blueish, chocolate, white or red (me in the summer).

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      14 hours ago

      In the 1950s … to average white people who might have never seen a black person before … they would imagine this

      • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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        9 hours ago

        I can promise you that the vast majority of white Americans had seen a black person in the 1950s.

        • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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          6 hours ago

          I know it’s difficult to grasp the idea that the world is larger than just the US. But you’ll just have to try.

          • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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            6 hours ago

            I mean let’s be real minstrel shows are explicitly a western concept, and were huge in the US. Go down another comment and I addressed the UK as well, but really that’s going to apply anywhere Americans were during WW2 as well.

            Anywhere that minstrel shows were popular by the 1950s most of those people would have at least seen a black person. America or otherwise.

            • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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              5 hours ago

              The whole idea of minstrel shows was to mock africans. Seeing a white guy in blackface is not equivalent to seeing a black person.

              • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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                5 hours ago

                What the fuck are you talking about?

                My whole point was by 1950 most white people had seen a black person and that their only idea wasn’t a minstrel show

                  • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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                    2 hours ago

                    Idk maybe all the black Americans actively fighting in some of Europe’s most populous countries during WW2 and the following American presence after the war.

                    And that’s ignoring the interactions between European nations and their African colonies. I’ll ignore the human zoos as well

          • FishFace@piefed.social
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            7 hours ago

            I don’t think minstrel shows with black face were common in Britain?

            It’s more likely that white British people took it as “much darker than the skin we’re assuming for people” which is enough to make the simile work.

          • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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            9 hours ago

            With the war and influx of American GIs in Britain, not to mention their colonies, I stand by my statement for Britain as well.

            What helps in the case of the UK is a larger percentage of their population lives in cities than the US too. Just by the math living in urban areas you’re just going to see more people and more people from outside your community will be come in.

            • f314@lemmy.world
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              8 hours ago

              True. A decade or two earlier might have been different: All the historical examples in this thread had my mind locked in to the twenties or thirties, not the fifties!

      • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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        14 hours ago

        Exactly … according to old-timey racists in the 1950s … this is what they imagined about black people

      • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        I mean I’m terrible with names but like, skin tones vary. Go back three generations and my great grandparents look very different from each other, only one of them is all that white but godsdammit they are the whitest shade of white that ever whited white. Albinos put on sunglasses when I walk by, I inherited it somehow from gamgam. You’d think it would have been recessive not dominant but here we are. I blame all the cheese we eat, gamgam loved cheese like I love cheese.

        My point was there’s this gorgeous actress/model (I think she was a bond girl) who has an amazingly dark skin tone.

    • Pixel_Jock_17@piefed.ca
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      11 hours ago

      I’m just spitballing here but maybe back in the 1950s and earlier there wasn’t as much mixed race couples or children from those interracial marriages? Like today we have so many shades of “black” that maybe wasn’t as popular nearly 100 years ago.

      Just a random thought

    • TribblesBestFriend@startrek.website
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      4 hours ago

      They « were » in theatre and movie production at the time. Black American weren’t allowed to play a role so they used white male with charcoal and shoe shine

      Fun fact they were some black actor that did black face as a kind of protestation IIRC