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Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair

The study of Black women's hair politics is recent. It refers to the existing social discussions and analyses of Black women's hair by Black women. And focuses on Black women's racial, gendered, political, and personal experiences with their hair. It explores how their views relate to dominant socie...

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Main Author: Zulu, Buhle
Other Authors: Maluleke, Gavaza
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Eng
Published: Department of Political Studies 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Zulu, Buhle
author2 Maluleke, Gavaza
author_browse Maluleke, Gavaza
Zulu, Buhle
author_facet Maluleke, Gavaza
Zulu, Buhle
author_sort Zulu, Buhle
collection Thesis
description The study of Black women's hair politics is recent. It refers to the existing social discussions and analyses of Black women's hair by Black women. And focuses on Black women's racial, gendered, political, and personal experiences with their hair. It explores how their views relate to dominant societal meanings attached to their hair. Over the years, this conversation has helped Black women voice and uncover how others perceive their hair. They explore these perceptions in the context of race, gender, location, and class. One dominant narrative that has emerged out of this discourse is the recurring issue of emotional pain experienced by Black women with African textured hair. From the early 1980s to the late 2000s, academic studies showed that Black women's pain about their African-textured hair came from historical racial discrimination and Euro-American beauty standards. Furthermore, these studies showed that western biases informed by discrimination target Black women and their hair. The dissertation analyzes the historical relationship between African and American experiences of Black women and Black hair. It explores how slavery connects these contexts. Furthermore, it examines three critical gaps in the association of Black women's African textured hair with pain. Firstly, the dissertation examines how African textured hair got to be associated with pain over the years. Secondly, it traces how racial historical perceptions on Blackness transformed the pain of having African textured hair to be solely centered on Black women. Thirdly, the dissertation explores how biological determinism during the American slavery era led to the perception of associating African textured hair with pain to be a Black female problem. This dissertation argues that the historical habitual tendency to associate Black women's African textured hair with pain, travels and is a repetitive issue that still affects Black women today. This dissertation used the postcolonial feminist research method. It included an in-depth discourse analysis of existing academic literature on Black women's hair discourses. It also analyzed the work of post-colonial (feminist) theorists in the areas of Black Feminist Thought and Transnational Feminism. This dissertation also analyzes contemporary material data from academic journals, newspaper articles, and YouTube material from the early 2000s Natural Hair Movement (NHM).
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:17.409Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Political Studies
publisherStr Department of Political Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41202 Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair Zulu, Buhle Maluleke, Gavaza Justice and Transformation The study of Black women's hair politics is recent. It refers to the existing social discussions and analyses of Black women's hair by Black women. And focuses on Black women's racial, gendered, political, and personal experiences with their hair. It explores how their views relate to dominant societal meanings attached to their hair. Over the years, this conversation has helped Black women voice and uncover how others perceive their hair. They explore these perceptions in the context of race, gender, location, and class. One dominant narrative that has emerged out of this discourse is the recurring issue of emotional pain experienced by Black women with African textured hair. From the early 1980s to the late 2000s, academic studies showed that Black women's pain about their African-textured hair came from historical racial discrimination and Euro-American beauty standards. Furthermore, these studies showed that western biases informed by discrimination target Black women and their hair. The dissertation analyzes the historical relationship between African and American experiences of Black women and Black hair. It explores how slavery connects these contexts. Furthermore, it examines three critical gaps in the association of Black women's African textured hair with pain. Firstly, the dissertation examines how African textured hair got to be associated with pain over the years. Secondly, it traces how racial historical perceptions on Blackness transformed the pain of having African textured hair to be solely centered on Black women. Thirdly, the dissertation explores how biological determinism during the American slavery era led to the perception of associating African textured hair with pain to be a Black female problem. This dissertation argues that the historical habitual tendency to associate Black women's African textured hair with pain, travels and is a repetitive issue that still affects Black women today. This dissertation used the postcolonial feminist research method. It included an in-depth discourse analysis of existing academic literature on Black women's hair discourses. It also analyzed the work of post-colonial (feminist) theorists in the areas of Black Feminist Thought and Transnational Feminism. This dissertation also analyzes contemporary material data from academic journals, newspaper articles, and YouTube material from the early 2000s Natural Hair Movement (NHM). 2025-03-19T08:19:05Z 2025-03-19T08:19:05Z 2024 2025-03-19T08:08:03Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41202 en Eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Justice and Transformation
Zulu, Buhle
Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
title_full Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
title_fullStr Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
title_full_unstemmed Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
title_short Travelling hair pains of the past: The continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women's hair
title_sort travelling hair pains of the past the continued impact of colonialism on the construction of black women s hair
topic Justice and Transformation
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41202
work_keys_str_mv AT zulubuhle travellinghairpainsofthepastthecontinuedimpactofcolonialismontheconstructionofblackwomenshair