"But for a black woman, it is most often her hair that catches her racial imagination. Her hair holds what she loves and hates about herself and shapes her experience of family, lovers, and friends. It forms her most intimate experiences of gender, race, social class, the humid summer, and the ocean. Hair is not only a marker for racial difference and gender-specific beauty, but the marker that seems most malleable. Black women spend thousands of dollars and hours to achieve dreams of love and acceptance through their hair. All things are possible through a tame "kitchen" (the rebellious, quickest-to-kink-up area at the nape of the neck), a few more inches, or the illusion of loose crinkles."
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Hair Quote of the Week
~ Asali Solomon, taken from the book Naked, edited by Ayana Byrd and Akiba Solomon
Posted by Stacy Graham-Hunt at 8:52 PM
Labels: Akiba Solomon, Asali Solomon, Ayana Byrd, Naked, Quotes, race, self-identity
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