BBC World Histories - 08.2019 - 09.2019

(backadmin) #1
75

Æ


they hadn’t seen anything like it before. So there are quite a lot
of descriptions of hair.
The accounts of Alvise Cadamosto, a Venetian explorer
who visited west Africa in 1455 and 1456 on behalf of
Portuguese prince Henry the Navigator, include the oldest
extant European references to African hair. Describing the
Jalofs of the south side of the Senegal river, he wrote that:
“Both sexes go bare-footed and uncovered, but weave their hair
with beautiful tresses, which they tie in various knots.”

That ornate hairstyling is an interesting facet in those
African cultures, because it can be a time-consuming process.
In your book, you explore the ways in which that process led
to time being seen in a different way from in western societies.
This is an important point, and I’ve dedicated a chapter to
talking about time. There’s a pretty strongly held concept that
caring for black hair in its natural state is too time-consuming,
so people straighten their hair because that makes it more
‘manageable’ and less burdensome.
That attitude was really interesting to me, because it seems
to suggest that black hair is deviant in some way. What I think
is actually going on, though, is that the society in which we
live is underpinned by the logic of capitalism in which time
has been repurposed for the maximisation of profit. So
anything that isn’t seen as productive in that specific sense
is seen as unnecessarily time-consuming or as a burden.
I looked at how different African groups organised time
before the imposition of wage labour, capitalism and colonial-
ism. [Kenyan philosopher] John Mbiti said that “man is not a
slave of time; instead, he ‘makes’ as much time as he wants” –
the idea being that people have enough time for whatever they
want to prioritise, including hairstyling. It’s only in a different
system, created with different standards and norms, that hair
and its management has been reimagined as burdensome.

Were traditional methods of hairstyling, such as braiding
and twisting, ways for societies and communities to bond?
Definitely. Rather than being seen as a time-consuming
burden, the hours spent in grooming and doing one another’s

Emma Dabiri photographed
in London. “The hours spent
grooming hair were important
social time during which
information was exchanged
and the bonds of a community
strengthened,” she says

FRAN MONKS

hair were seen as important social time during which informa-
tion was exchanged and the bonds of a community strength-
ened. The physical proximity involved in hairstyling was
important in developing intimacy between a parent and child
or two members of that community, too.

What were some of the reasons why later colonisers of
Africa came to regard hair in a less positive way?
There was a shift in attitudes that happened once slavery and,
later, colonialism become the primary reasons Europeans were
in the continent. The more complimentary descriptions were
quite drastically replaced by far more negative ones, and the
idea was introduced that Africans are incredibly idle and that
they weren’t using their time productively – in other words,
for the maximisation of profit.
Part of the justification for slavery and other oppressive
systems of extraction was that African people were not seen as
fully human. One of the ways in which this idea was advanced
was that, unlike European people, Africans didn’t even have
hair – they had wool, like livestock. Because they were seen as
being like animals, that became one of the justifications for
enslavement and for colonialism: it was a ‘civilising mission’,
bringing the light of civilisation to this dark continent.

This view was hugely toxic. What is its legacy today?
Because these narratives were so powerful, because the power
dynamic was so balanced in favour of white European norms,
and because these norms were extracted from Africa and the
Americas to other parts of the world, the idea developed that
Afro-textured hair was inadequate, inferior and associated
with a kind of non-humanity. These ideas were internalised,
and hair began to be seen as deviant and problematic. That
led to the birth of hair straightening and attempts to make
African hair resemble European hair.

What techniques have people – perhaps even you – used
to achieve this throughout the 20th and 21st centuries?
The first hot combs were in use by the early 20th century.
The most permanent method, though, uses ‘relaxer’, in

ИЗП


ОДГ

ОТО

ВИЛ

АГР

УППППFRAN MONKSFRAN MONKSFRAN MONKSFRAN MONKS

ААFRAN MONKSFRAN MONKS

"What's

News"

VK.COM/WSNWS
Free download pdf