
Threatening consumption: managing US imperial anxieties in representations of skin lightening in India
This paper contextualizes the US mainstream media coverage of the skin-lightening industry in India within a moment of imperial crisis in the United States in the early part of the twenty-first century. Discourse analysis of news media accounts indicates that orientalist colonial tropes
of Indian primitiveness, traditionalism, and gendered difference intersect with American post-racial ideology to disassociate American consumers from an Indian consuming public. Thus, representations of skin lightening attempt to ease imperial anxieties around the United States' faltering
economic dominance due to the rise of emerging economies like India by reviving nationalist narratives of American exceptionalism. Not only does this obscure racism and colorism in the United States, it also impedes recognition of the overlapping conditions of transnational commercialized
beauty culture and industry within which white/light beauty standards and skin-whitening products flourish.
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Keywords: India; US imperialism; consumer culture; emerging markets; news media; post-racialism; skin lightening/whitening
Document Type: Research Article
Affiliations: American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Publication date: January 1, 2013
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