EIFFEL!! DRAW MORE ANCAP AND MY LIFE IS YOURS!!!
I think she deserves a dress :3c

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EIFFEL!! DRAW MORE ANCAP AND MY LIFE IS YOURS!!!
I think she deserves a dress :3c
hey girl do you like girls
weekicide 5: one of the main four
material girl living in a material world
roaring 20′s femcap brainrot (i promise the ancap fanart spam will be over soon i’m so sorry)
couple of people on my server were simping over fem!ancap so i drew her
Janell Hobson brings up Carole Boyce Davie’s comments on the “blondeing” of Black pop stars in Feminists Debate Beyonce. The progressive lightening of many pop star’s hair as well as the use of “whitening” products is argued to be a form of self colonization.
The pressure for Black media icons - and even everyday Black women - to fit white beauty standards is enormous. Historically this has often resulted in famous Black women (and men) participating in various hair modification, skin bleaching and plastic surgery techniques to make their brand closer to what society’s ideal.
The example most people vividly remember is Michael Jackson. The international pop star had vitiligo and at the time the “treatment” for the skin disorder was skin bleaching cream. However Jackson also received several nose jobs, which shrunk his “Jackson 5 nostrils” to a button nose, and frequently wore straight black wigs.
Other celebs who participated in serious plastic surgery that gave them more European features include Lil Kim and Janet Jackson. Even Nicki Minaj has developed progressively more straight, blonde hair.
Beyonce gets a whole lot of flack for not being “Black enough” (a criticism laden in colorism). What’s interesting to note however is that Beyonce’s image really hasn’t progressed in a similar manner to the Jacksons or Minaj or Lil Kim. Since the 90′s Beyonce has been rocking some form of highlights or a dirty blonde wig, but that’s it. Moreover, Beyonce’s image has recently taken an unexpected turn - the pop star has been loudly and proudly flaunting her Blackness. It started with Lemonade, her visual album in which natural hair is a motif throughout. Now it’s strange to see Beyonce on stage without natural-textured hair and an outfit dedicated to either African roots or the civil rights movement. In all it’s a very interesting and empowering trajectory and one her critics never saw coming. Beyonce may be blonde, but she is not one of the “blondeing.”
right unity
*girlifies your ancap*