I Am Not My Hair: Reclaiming Black Beauty
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Date
2019-05-01
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Abstract
This poster explores the hairstyles and hair stories of Black women in America. The images follow a historical chronology from
the legacy of slavery to these contemporary times. Black women have both struggled to conform to and at times to reject the
traditional Eurocentric definitions of beauty. From the early 1900s to the 1950s, we see a shift from headscarves and natural hair
(typically worn by former slaves and sharecroppers) to chemical straighteners. In the 1960s and 70s, the Afro became a symbol for
the Black Power Movement and the “Black is beautiful” mantra. The 1980s and 90s represented a backlash and rejection of the
Afro that was considered revolutionary and confrontational; we witnessed a return to the hairstyles of the early 20th century, with relaxers, wigs, and jheri curls. And finally, the 2000s to the present have ushered in an “anything goes” attitude and the
democratization of media, through Facebook, natural hair websites, and Youtube tutorials have encouraged many Black
women to reclaim their natural hair. Currently, Black women are using a variety of means of constructing identities that challenge
the definitions of who and what is beautiful to ultimately proclaim, “we are more than our hair.”
Description
Poster created by Rebecca and Salimah Hankins, March 30, 2015.
Keywords
African Americans, Women, Hair