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Why do women wear weave? (2271 hits)

I found an interesting article on this subject and thought I'd share it. The jist of the article of course, is that black women wear weave to feel "feminine". Is that true or is it just more speculation? And why is there so much focus on hair in this society? [specifically black women's hair?] It's JUST HAIR, people. Nothing important whether it's real or fake. Anyway, the article is below. Thought it provided at least one thoughtful answer. I'm sure there are many many other thoughtful answers about this curious phenomenon. Though, especially curious for me are people who resent women who wear weave, as if the act of wearing hair weave were an act of betrayal. Or people who stop to ask black women with long hair if their hair is real. Or even women who have naturally long hair who feel that having long hair makes them superior to women who wear weave ("Bleh Bleh Bleh, my hair is real!) What say you on this subject? What is our preoccupation with hair in American society? Or is there some racial subtext / context rearing its ugly head?

from: http://www.alternet.org/story/48280/?page=...


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- By wearing weaves and wigs, black women can become the type of woman society doesn't otherwise expect them to be. But do these counter-identities lead to empowerment or self-loathing?


This past winter, I noticed something very unsettling while I was visiting my family in St. Louis.


Almost all the black women I encountered were sporting lavishly long hair weaves, fake locks that can add length and volume after being sewed or glued to the scalp. Weaves come in straight, curly and kinky textures. But most black women with weaves wear them to extend and straighten the appearance of their naturally coiled and nappy hair.


Everywhere I turned, from the church to the mall, black women suited up in this straight-hair uniform. Was I missing something? I thought. Would my close-cut Afro set me too far apart from other black women?

Natural, kinky hair -- which is most associated with blackness -- has also been tied to inferiority in the United States. We can thank entrepreneur Madam C.J. Walker, the late 19th century inventor of the hot pressing comb -- literally a comb-shaped iron -- for the subsequent years of black women burning their disobedient hair into submission. Still today among African Americans, there exists a strata between those with "bad hair" and "good hair," the latter being hair that is most in sync with the dominant culture.


Walk into any pharmacy and you'll see a deluge of harsh chemical products that promise black women unnappy hair. Many believe this is a demonstration of self-loathing.


The January 2007 copy of Essence magazine I picked up didn't help. "Look Beautiful in your 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s . . . Real Women and Celebs Share Beauty and Health Secrets," the cover read. Featured were three celebrities with flowing, bouncy weaves and another woman whose silver hair was visibly straightened to suppress the real curl underneath.


Essence had made it clear: There was no way to be nappy-haired and beautiful at any age.

Myopic Beauty Image

This perplexed me because around St. Louis, so many everyday women who have no celebrity stakes to claim were subscribing to this myopic image of beauty wrapped around these hair weaves that, by the way, can take hours to glue onto the scalp and cost hundreds of dollars.


I wanted to walk in their shoes and understand them, so I decided to get a long, straight wig. Without the labor-intensive process, I achieved the luscious locks of a weave so I could learn what the non-celebrity woman had to gain from emulating the straight hair of non-African woman.


After several days of wearing the wig and interviewing black women, I found that the straight-hair phenomenon has little to do with a need to fit into mainstream social settings. Rather, these long weaves may reflect our desire to try on a different feminine persona that has historically been appropriated for white women.

Throughout time, weaves and wigs have served as costumes for black women to put on when they want to look s*xy, such as in the 2006 movie "Dream Girls" that's loosely based on the 1960s rise of the Supremes, a Motown sensation.

In the opening scene of the movie, before the Dreams enter their first big show, they shift their poofy, European-hair wigs around. Finding a perfect fit, they then put on a killer show. As the Dreams become more successful and switch from mostly black to mostly white audiences, their hair get-ups become longer and bigger. The Dreams begin to look like white women in black face. And when one of the members gets kicked out of the band because of her hefty appearance, she quickly reverts to wearing an Afro.


Buying a Wig


I knew my hair was being mistaken for my femininity upon entering the Asian-owned beauty-supply store in my predominantly black neighborhood where I went to buy my wig. Perhaps because the elderly Asian sales lady kept saying: "Oh you pretty . . . with the wig."




A few weeks later, I moved to New York and met an actress and professor of aesthetic studies at the University of Texas-Dallas. Venus Opal Reese has interviewed hundreds of black women in researching this hair transformation.

During the opening night of her one-woman play "Split Ends," which takes an in-depth look at black women and their historical tangle with hair, Reese bombarded a small stage wearing a skimpy dress and a Tina Turner wig just as wild as her flailing arms. Seconds later, the wig flew off and fell to the floor. As the crowd yelped with laughter, Reese hurried to pick it up, and kept waving the hair in her hand as if still attached to her swirling head.

"Being a woman is a performance," she said in the skit. "It's a full-time, thankless job."


Dressing Up in Drag

Her point was to show that by wearing weaves and wigs, black women are dressing up in their own drag, whereby they can become the type of woman they aren't otherwise expected to be. Black women weaving up has so much to do with our need to feel feminine and strong at different points in our lives, Reese argued later in a phone interview.


"Hair is a navigator," she said. "It's a negotiator, it's a deal-breaker."
I'd say. In a world where black women are constantly blunted by racial and s*xual discrimination, it makes sense that we'd begin adopting counter-representations of ourselves.

That's what the wig did for me. It gave me the freedom to be aloof, to flirt and to smile without fear of not receiving smiles in return.


I made several outings with the wig. During one trip, I went to a mall. The weave made my confidence soar. Heading there, I drove faster than usual. And every time I reached to pick up my cell phone, I dramatically tossed my hair back and said "Haloh!" roaring and perky like a valley girl. I was ready to explode onto the mall scene and attract all kinds of men.

As I entered the sliding doors, my hair swooshed about my face and I loved it. And after some time, I noticed that I was moving around like a butterfly, flighty and irregular. I couldn't stop giggling like a school girl and tossing my hair lightly back as I rolled my eyes sensuously around while talking.


The wig had changed me; with it, I felt excited to become Nikita, who I assumed was a fun-loving white woman.

I believed I could seduce with my hair without thinking men wouldn't return my vibes because I was too black. Whatever that feeling -- call it femininity if you like -- I had more of it. And while I hated the persistent itch of the wig and those fluffy bangs scratching my eyes, for the first time, I saw clearly the power of weaves.
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Wednesday, March 25th 2009 at 2:07AM
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Why do black women wear wigs...
This is an interested read.
I am a black female with locked hair. My hair has been locked since 1984. Occasionally I color my locks for a different look, sometimes I wear a wig to have a different look because I'm not ready to cut my locks, and I don't like damaging chemicals on my scalp. Other times because I am in the performing arts it becomes necessary to wear a wig. So I wear wigs for different reasons. With the exception of the wigs that I wear for performances, my 'other different look wigs' are all natural, kinky hairstyles. When I go into a wig shop which is usually operated by an asian person, they invariably lead me to the straight hair wigs and enthusiastically encourage me to purchase one. I casually walk around the store until I see the locked wigs, afro wigs, kinky wigs and ask to try them on. These wigs are invariably situated in the back of the shop, down on the lower shelves not very visible to the public. And, I might say I don't think many of them are purchased, at least not in the stores where I've shopped. When I try on the natural wigs, the sales person just looks, and usually makes no comment. If I decide to try on a wig with straight hair, the sales person immediately comments how great it looks. I have actually seen a look of puzzlement on the sales person's face when I finally pick out the wig that's natural.
When I wear a straight wig usually for a performance, the males in the environment, both black and white go out of their way to emphasize "how nice you look today"
OR "I love your hair like that, you should wear it like that more often". In one case a black male told me "you look so much nicer like this". That statement from that male stuck with me for a long time. I have had a lot of rejection by black males because I don't straighten my hair. Remarks such as the one this blalck male made bring to light the all too painful reality that aside from rejection from other cultures in this sociey around the way we as dark skin black females look; the rejection of black males is the most painful. To cover up this pain and not to have to feel it, we resort to the one thing that we hope will make 'our' men attractive to us, the way some of them are attractive to women of 'other' cultures and that is the hair.
There is a play written by George Wolfe called Coloured Museum, and one of the characters makes the statement that "it's all about the hair", in this society it is very true. This society considers the most perfect hair to be that of asians and people from east india. I really feel that the pain of rejection that a lot of black women know they will encounter from their husbands, boyfriends and just black males in general is something we don't want to have to deal with. I used to date a black male from the caribbean and when we were in public and he would see a black female with locked hair, he would actually ask me if it was alright if he went over and complimented her on her hair. He would do this all the time because he really loves black women with natural hair. I know that there are black men who like black females with natural hair, but they're not very vocal about it so some black females may not feel that black males in a great proportion like natural hair. I think one of the best things we as black females can do is to openly address this issue among ourselves, and confront it and stop hiding behind the falls, weaves, and wigs. Some of us will lose dates over this, husbands may become upset, but at some point we have to accept ourselves. I think it's okay to wear artificial hair if it's just a matter of wanting a different look without putting damaging chemicals on the hair and eventually in the system. But if we're not proud to be ourselves and proud of what God gave us, we will always be making ourselves look foolish, and not be respected by other cultures. We will never be accepted in this society, but we can get respect. Thanks for sharing the article.
Wednesday, March 25th 2009 at 11:32AM
Reader Nelson
...And every time I reached to pick up my cell phone, I dramatically tossed my hair back and said "Haloh!" roaring and perky like a valley girl. I was ready to explode onto the mall scene and attract all kinds of men...

Wow, Interesting blog E !! This brings back memories from back in the day for me. When I was a child, I used to sneak in my aunt's closet and get her long haired wig. When I put on the wig, I'd do my Sonny and Cher like Penny on "Good Times".
I was asked by a co worker one morning as she was admiring my hair, "Why don't more black women at work wear their natural hair?" I didn't know how to answer her question, because I was caught off guard and quickly changed the subject by telling her about the time my son pulled my wig off in a crowded park...and how at that point...I vowed to never wear wigs!!

Isn't hair like a fashion/fad? Hair is always evolving like fashion. Things that were in vogue in the early 90's are no longer the vogue. I loved the short Toni Braxton and Halle haircuts, but it appears that is no longer the vogue. In my opinion as I could be wrong, but there isn't anything wrong with black women wearing longer hair whether it be weaves, wigs, or otherwise. Isn't like white women, getting tans, injecting collagen into their lips, and buttocks implants?? It's nice to escape to fantasy land sometimes.

Wednesday, March 25th 2009 at 12:29PM
Jen Fad
I don't think women wear weaves to feel feminine I think they wear them to enhance their beauty. Personally I cut mine off and then let it grow and cut it again :-). I don't think I could wear a wig because I'm too fidgety it would get on my nerve real quick. I give it up to all the women who can handle them because they are definetly not for me.

Reader Nelson - I'm glad you got over what that ignorant little man had to say about you looking nicer in a wig. We have been conditioned to think that our natural beauty is not beauty at all. The choice to wear your hair anyway should be that. Besides white people tease and curl their hair and tan till they die from skin cancer to get what you have naturally.
Thursday, March 26th 2009 at 12:00AM
crystal smith
I enjoy wigs and weave. I have a lovely head of hair, but enjoy the change, the freedom to choose a new look at a whim. It's just fun to change styles. When i was married I had to keep the particular style my husband liked, but since I have been single I find that sometimes i'll change hair styles every day of the week if I feel like it. It has nothing to do with esteem, just fashion.
Saturday, April 4th 2009 at 10:06PM
BJ Abrams
/*
Speaking to this topic is ironic...a few of the fellas and I were discussing this. We are all Black Menm by the.

Me...I prefer Black Women with their natural hair! I find Black Hair very attractive. The fact that women wear wigs and weaves does make my wonder why. One Black Woman who is a close friend explained her reasons...they were very much the same as many of you have suggested...she decided to not use them anymore...she cut her hair to an very attractive short length and she looked absolutely gorgeous! All of the guys could not stop looking at her. She stated that she could just about do any and everything that she wanted to do with it, especially if she was running late. What ever happened to The Fro? Remember Angela Davis? Maya Angalu? Niki Giavanni? They were some of the most beautiful women that I've ever seen with the large and not so large natural hair styles.

I would love to see that come back to prominenc.

Peace and Love Ladies...your are ALL TRULLY BEAUTIFUL!!!

Greg.
http://www.BoulwareEnterprises.com
*/
Monday, August 17th 2009 at 11:29AM
Gregory V. Boulware, Esq.
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