Relating to or affecting a person's complexion or facial appearance.
From 'complexion' (Old French, from Latin complexio meaning 'combination') plus '-al'. Originally referred to the combination of bodily humors that determined health and temperament.
Medieval doctors used 'complexional' to diagnose diseases—they'd look at your skin color and mood, thinking your face literally displayed your internal balance of blood, bile, and phlegm!
"Complexion" historically encoded racial and gender categorizations in beauty, medicine, and anthropology from the 17th–19th centuries, associating skin tone and appearance with moral/intellectual character—a framework weaponized against women and colonized peoples.
When discussing appearance, avoid moral/character inference. Use neutral descriptors (skin tone, features) without linking to ability, intelligence, or worth.
["skin tone","appearance descriptor"]
Women dermatologists and scientists (e.g., Madam C.J. Walker, who built cosmetic industry) reclaimed beauty knowledge from patriarchal medicine, proving appearance science belongs to those with lived experience.
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