Black people’s politics

White isn’t always right

Of course it’s my hair.I paid for it! March 28, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — soozy99 @ 5:00 pm

The weave- it gets its fair bit of criticism. Ask any man and he would most definately cuss at a girl that always wears one. But what’s wrong with weaving? Many men will say that they are fake, and in a sense false advertising. When guys see a hot girl , one of the main features that attracts him to her is her hair. It is understandable that a guy might be a bit pissed off at the discovery that it is not real!

woman getting straight weave done Tyra Banks is known for always having a straight weave.

Those that are still all for black power would suggest that weaving sees black women trying to look white, and obviously for them the weave is a big no, no. Personally, I dismiss the politics behind the weave and say that fake hair is great hair! It allows for versality, so you don’t get bored sporting the same hairstyle day in day out. Is it not the case that wearing a weave is just like wearing make up? Make-up does not tranform a girl’s looks, it enhances them-the weave has the same effect.

However, it must be pointed out that the most popular weave style is long and straight- emulating European hair. It can be accepted why this is an issue. Is the fact that so many black women weave to have the ideal long, straight hair a form of self-loathing. Are black women dissatisfied with their natural kinky, frizzy and even nappy hair? and are we conforming to Western ideals of beauty?

In some respects I think western ideals of beauty still prevail, and because of this discrimination in the beauty industry will always be there.

 

The Black Panther Party are wrongly admired to this day March 11, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — soozy99 @ 4:48 pm

What connotations come to mind when you think about the panther? Strong, powerful, dominant and fearless- it could be said that the controversial Black Panther Party embodied these characteristics. There are however, alternative characteristics associated with the panther; characteristics that fail to capture the essence of the animal in such a favourable light. What about predator, dangerous and even a beast that is capable of heinous violence.

The Black Panther Party without a doubt possessed all of the characteristics of a panther. Yes, they were strong and powerful, being the first black political organisation to actually stand up and be heard at a time when black people did not have a voice (The clenched fist, the renowned symbol of black power was created by the Black Panthers). Of course they had tremendous effects on the attitudes of young black people of the time, It created a new positive air of self worth. However, the methods of the Black Panthers were all wrong. They were dangerous, ALWAYS using force to be heard. Take their attire for example, often military jackets, hats, the afro and complete with a huge gun strapped to their chest, intimidating to say the least. To this day the Panthers are admired by black people as if they were heros. (their politics have even sparked the creation of the New Black Panther Party. a modern version of the original organisation.) Little emphaisis is given to their violent side.

Heroes, really?

 

Malcolm X, Black Power and their relevance to hair March 7, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — soozy99 @ 3:11 pm
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X Campaigning

He has been called a hero, a leader and even the father of Black Power, but was Malcolm X really such a great man? Many disagree with the favourable pictures painted of him, branding him an extremist, crazy and even a racist spokesman of the fanatical Nation of Islam. Which description did the real X fall under, and what relevance did he have to black people and their hair?

Malcolm X was born in 1925 in Nebraska. His father is said to have been an outspoken Baptist speaker, that was strongly affiliated with an activist group called the Universal Negro Improvment Association. from a young age he was exposed to politics and the social inequalities of black people; living in that era social inequality was his world. His mother was light-skinned, and it is often documented that X often shunned her for that reason, claiming that she looked like a white woman. While X was still young three of his uncles were violently murdered by white men in racist attacks, (attacks of this kind are depicted in the film ‘Mississippi Burning’) . This has been suggested to fuel an element of hatred for white people in X, a hatred that would later be the ammunition of the Black Power movement. X was baptised Malcolm Little, but in 1952 changed his surname to X in the pursuit of freeing himself of his “slave name”. He chose X, as this was often the symbol branded on the arms of slaves. The Caucasion sounding names of black-Americans are usually the names of the slave masters of their ancestors, thus many blacks opted to changing their names. The most common example is Mohammed Ali, who was born Cassius Clay.

X spent a proportion of his life in prison for theft. It was while in Prison that he developed a profuse thirst for reading, and spent much of his time in the prison library. He acquired the nickname Satan among fellow inmates for his well known hatred of the God, the Bible and religion in general. After serving his sentence, he met Elijah Muhammad. The two of them would serve to publicise The Nation of Islam, and the growing political movement of Black Power.

The Nation of Islam is a religious, social and political organisation that promotes ideas of Black Supremacy. It preaches, like regular Islam that there is no other God but Allah. Their beliefs go further to suggest that the human form of Allah was witnessed in W. D. Fard, the creator of the Nation of Islam. The organisation is often rightly called racist, for example, they frequently refer to white people as “the devil” in their teaching.The nation of Islam seemed to capture the minds and hearts of many young black people of the time; it was new, it was liberal and it was the first organisation to state that black people were not inferior to white people, but in fact preech the opposite. It was almost as if the organisation was fashionable, Mohammed Ali, a strong public figure at the time was doing it, so eveyone else wanted to follow suit. There was a change of thinking, and this trancended into the way Black people saw themselves. They were no longer ashamed to be black, they were proud-This was the essence of Black Power and the birth of the afro hairstyle.

The afro became the symbol of Black Power, it strongly stated the common expression “Black is beautiful” which played a huge role in the liberation of black people. However, a dark-side can be suggested. The movement was so closely connected with the Nation of Islam, which has been shown to be openly racist. Malcolm X could be called a hero  on one hand, but he can also be called an istigator of hate and extremist views on the other. There are even FBI files on X that claim that he was in fact Schizophrenic.

Malcolm X was assasinated on February 21 1965. His extremist views and his affliation with the Nation of Islam served to kill him. Was this the death of a great man, an activist that caused black people to gain selfworth that trancended into the way they wear their hair? Or was this the end of a hateful man that promoted racism in Black people? What do you think?

 

Black hair has always been political March 6, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — soozy99 @ 5:47 pm
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Artist Erykah Badu rocking an afro

So what is this site all about? Its name makes it obvious doesn’t it?- the politics of the black people and their hair. You might think that a whole site dedicated to the subject of black hair is pointless,when there are subjects such as poverty, gun crime, obeisity and all the other issues that have that element of ’seriousness’ attached to them, hopefully I will demonstrate how serious the politics of black hair can be. This site will serve to highlight the issues surrounding black people and the cosmetic industry, racism in the industry, whether Western ideals of beauty still prevail, and more.

There have always been issues attached to black people and the way they wear their hair; the most obvious example is the emergence of the afro during the late sixties and early seventies. This was the result of an era of black power; the Black Panther Party were campaigning potently, Malcolm X also. Black pride was in the air, no longer were black people conforming to western ideals of beauty by straightening their hair- for the first time they let their natural hair stand out, big and bushy in all its glory.

Today, we have an equally political hair trend in the weave. You see them everywhere, it is like every black girl out there (well apart from those who were blessed with good natural hair!) has one. What is this saying about the young black female of today? Is she hiding underneath her weave? Could it be suggested that black people have conformed to be accepted in the West?

Black hair has always been political, it is far more than just aesthetics. The only problem is that it is dismissed as insignificant, when it is far from it.