Last week, I decided to get professional headshots taken. Freebie photos taken during work functions were no longer appropriate. The process was mildly relaxing; I couldn’t wait to utilise the fruits of my labour.
Part of my headshot package involved 'retouched' images. I wondered what 'retouched' would mean in the context of my face.
When an image returned, I noticed my skin had been edited to depict me as 'whiter'. A significant change from the brown skin of my Iranian and Italian descent.
This alteration stirred up several thoughts.
The first was the culturally insensitive nature of this act; whether intentional or not. Whoever edited that photo made an assumption (in 2022, mind you) that I want to be lighter-skinned. I don’t.
It also made me question whether my skin colour is the wrong kind of brown. It’s not Gold Coast gold or olive. This flesh is a brown that belongs only to the subcontinent.
'Enhancing' my physicality by lightening my skin colour only reinforces the notion that my brown skin is not society’s ideal. And in the context of a headshot, my brown skin may not be perceived as professional, employment-worthy, or symbolic of leadership.
I’m no stranger to comments that critique my ethnicity under the guise of Australian larrikin behaviour. (And anyone who knows me, knows I love a joke.) Greasy; swarthy; eagle nose; sand rat. Words I’ve heard from the very people I admire the most: leaders; colleagues; friends. My cultural background has been a topic of conversation in workplaces; a spectacle at parties.
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