Benn98
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2014
- Messages
- 42,582
- Reaction score
- 20,780
Galliano paid for his transgressions a thousand times over. These others literally got a slap on the wrist in comparison.
True. And the Piet character in the Netherlands. Which even if you look and dissect if superficially, it's still problematic. So you know as the UK we have a stronger footprint than France, Italy, Spain and to a lesser extent, Germany, regarding coloniasm. If you look back to our visual literature, the dark skin/red lips depiction was rampant back then. But you'd be hard pressed to see a British publication or figure exploit it so irresponsibly like we've seen from these people. It's just in poor taste. Especially since black culture has been integrated so seamlessly into our society to the extent that there's no us/them mentality. What does that say about how these wrongdoers regard integration? Take it one step furter - they're trying to sell to handbags and trinkets to a people who they're insulting or mocking if at the same time?
I don't think there neccesarily need to be a black American on their member of staff list. Because that's firstly implying that any other Africans would overlook something like this as frivolous, and more importantly, also absolving blame from the rest of the staff. Not my fault, I'm dumb, I don't know any better. Which is not an excuse. This is a skilled field. Thank God contemporary education in fashion is linked to not only to history and geography, but also cultural sensitivity.
It's like these fashion professionals are all adult versions of little Greg from Curb, lol:
The D&G earring was just a figure that was known in the southern Italian culture much like a French person can reference creole culture and stuff like that.
True. And the Piet character in the Netherlands. Which even if you look and dissect if superficially, it's still problematic. So you know as the UK we have a stronger footprint than France, Italy, Spain and to a lesser extent, Germany, regarding coloniasm. If you look back to our visual literature, the dark skin/red lips depiction was rampant back then. But you'd be hard pressed to see a British publication or figure exploit it so irresponsibly like we've seen from these people. It's just in poor taste. Especially since black culture has been integrated so seamlessly into our society to the extent that there's no us/them mentality. What does that say about how these wrongdoers regard integration? Take it one step furter - they're trying to sell to handbags and trinkets to a people who they're insulting or mocking if at the same time?
I don't think there neccesarily need to be a black American on their member of staff list. Because that's firstly implying that any other Africans would overlook something like this as frivolous, and more importantly, also absolving blame from the rest of the staff. Not my fault, I'm dumb, I don't know any better. Which is not an excuse. This is a skilled field. Thank God contemporary education in fashion is linked to not only to history and geography, but also cultural sensitivity.
It's like these fashion professionals are all adult versions of little Greg from Curb, lol:
