“<i>Beneath the Surface</i> is nothing short of a tour de force. Lynn M. Thomas's ‘layered history’ does justice to the immensely difficult subject of skin lighteners. Carefully attending to the complex politics of race and color that are grounded in skin, Thomas at once provides a vibrant history of South Africa and a global history of commodity, beauty, and the body. This landmark study sets a new standard in the field.” - Julie Livingston, author of (Self-Devouring Growth: A Planetary Parable as Told from Southern Africa) “Allowing for a comparative analysis over a period of time when the global relationships and meanings of skin color became tied to class, race, and racism, <i>Beneath the Surface</i> helps us understand the intense and long-standing interest whites and blacks have had in lightening the color of their skin despite the potential for severe health risks. There is simply no other book like it.” - Noliwe M. Rooks, author of (Hair Raising: Beauty, Culture, and African American Women) "<i>Beneath the Surface </i>makes a necessary contribution to [a] small pool of work on beauty and geography as Thomas' analysis integrates these subjects in considering the (trans)national politics and racial inequalities that uphold skin lightening.… This book would appeal to both undergraduate and graduate students as well as scholars interested in beauty, geopolitics, race, and colonialism." - Meena Pyatt (Gender, Place & Culture) “Thomas resourcefully assembles and interweaves sources connecting popular, business, medical and political culture. …. <i>Beneath the Surface</i> would be an engaging key text for students to study a history of race and gender within everyday global beauty cultures.” - Fabiola Creed (Metascience) "<i>Beneath the Surface</i> is the most comprehensive book regarding skin lighteners available to date and it is both interesting and innovative.… The book has value as a postgraduate textbook relevant to the fields of history, social science, geopolitics, gender studies, geography, psychology, dermatology, and others. The layered, integrated history presented by Thomas in <i>Beneath the Surface</i> is indeed 'a landmark study' of skin colour and skin lighteners that interrogates every influencing factor from slavery and segregation to consumer capitalism, political protests and reinforced social inequities, and beyond." - Caradee White (South African Journal of Science) "Lynn Thomas’s <i>Beneath the Surface</i> constructs a history of skin lighteners that is simultaneously rigorous in its historical evidence base and virtuosic in its lucid articulation of the technologies as they are mobilised in complex contexts in and beyond South Africa. . . . Its biopolitical argument is convincingly made and compelling." - Vivette Garcia-Deister (BioSocieties) "This is an impressive book that will surely be a classic for scholars interested in aesthetics, beauty politics, and gender. It is an especially welcome addition to the literature as it centers on African history from a transnational perspective. It also has much to offer those with specialization in the history of science, medicine, and technology." - Oluwakemi M. Balogun (Journal of African History)
A Layered History 1
1. Cosmetic Practices and Colonial Crucibles 22
2. Modern Girls and Racial Respectability 47
3. Local Manufacturing and Color Consciousness 75
4. Beauty Queens and Consumer Capitalism 98
5. Active Ingredients and Growing Criticism 150
6. Black Consciousness and Biomedical Opposition 190
Sedimented Meanings and Compounded Politics 221
Notes 237
Bibliography 293
Index