This article explores how hair and notions of race are entangled both within anthropology and in the commercial world of the billion dollar global market for human hair. Focusing in particular on detached hair, it explores the recurring dynamic through which hair is racialized on the one hand and resists racialization on the other. This is explored in three inter-related contexts the roots of which are deeply embedded in historic relations of power. The first is that of 19th and early 20th century physical anthropology when hair was thought to provide a key to racial distinctions; the second refers to contemporary black hair cultures in which hair is racialized both in the market place where it is advertised through ethnic signifiers and in...
History reflects the social, religious and political importance of human hair. Individuals have used...
The Mane Attraction: Black Women\u27s Hair Beauty Standards shows how white hegemony and the history...
The Natural Hair Movement is changing how women of colour make sense of their hair and what they do ...
This paper examines representations of hair on the boundaries of ethnography and fashion, to complic...
In this article, we use the consumption of and perspectives on hair by Africans on the continent and...
Treatment of European and African hair radically differed in the time of slavery: the former sentime...
Human hair has long been valued as a fibre for its qualities of fineness, strength and elasticity. T...
Hair, like skin color, is a social marker that distinguishes Blacks from others\ud and has essential...
Abstract: My project traces the evolution of African-American women’s attitudes and perceptions that...
The way we modify and view hair culturally has important resonances, not only for the construction o...
This article addresses the prevalence of colorism among the hair care narratives of African American...
In countries like the United States, White people benefit from appropriating Black hair culture, eve...
Sociologists characterize social movements as the collective struggle of marginalized and/or stigmat...
2019-03-13The 2010s witnessed the rise of the “natural hair movement” among women of African descent...
This chapter explores ethnicity and fashion in the nineteenth century for the new multivolume collec...
History reflects the social, religious and political importance of human hair. Individuals have used...
The Mane Attraction: Black Women\u27s Hair Beauty Standards shows how white hegemony and the history...
The Natural Hair Movement is changing how women of colour make sense of their hair and what they do ...
This paper examines representations of hair on the boundaries of ethnography and fashion, to complic...
In this article, we use the consumption of and perspectives on hair by Africans on the continent and...
Treatment of European and African hair radically differed in the time of slavery: the former sentime...
Human hair has long been valued as a fibre for its qualities of fineness, strength and elasticity. T...
Hair, like skin color, is a social marker that distinguishes Blacks from others\ud and has essential...
Abstract: My project traces the evolution of African-American women’s attitudes and perceptions that...
The way we modify and view hair culturally has important resonances, not only for the construction o...
This article addresses the prevalence of colorism among the hair care narratives of African American...
In countries like the United States, White people benefit from appropriating Black hair culture, eve...
Sociologists characterize social movements as the collective struggle of marginalized and/or stigmat...
2019-03-13The 2010s witnessed the rise of the “natural hair movement” among women of African descent...
This chapter explores ethnicity and fashion in the nineteenth century for the new multivolume collec...
History reflects the social, religious and political importance of human hair. Individuals have used...
The Mane Attraction: Black Women\u27s Hair Beauty Standards shows how white hegemony and the history...
The Natural Hair Movement is changing how women of colour make sense of their hair and what they do ...