Description
The definitive overview of hair in the modern age, this ground-breaking scholarly work presents the last hundred years of hair in culture and examines diverse topics such as gender, ethnicity, morality, status, hygiene, eroticism, and belief.
About the Author
Geraldine Biddle-Perry is Associate Lecturer in Cultural Studies at Central Saint Martins, London, UK, and co-author of Hair: Styling, Culture and Fashion.
Reviews
A thick, tangled and deliciously idiosyncratic history of hair ... There is plenty to inform and intrigue, partly because the study of hair demands an exhilarating disciplinary range: from the art of cuts and colours, the history of scissors, razors and combs and the sociology of barbershops, to the semiotics of hair pulling and lock tugging, the ethnography of "Afros", and the sexual politics of boyish bobs. * Times Literary Supplement *
[I]n carefully argued, insightful case studies that deploy sophisticated analytical tools, this volume's contributors document the complex shifts in hair dressing and grooming which have located hair as central to contemporary individualistic self-fashioning and as a key signifier of sexuality and lifestyle politics. Innovative and persuasive, this collection provides an invaluable history of hair for those who want to truly understand its modern significance and powerful cultural status. -- Andrew Stephenson, University of East London, UK
Book Information
ISBN 9781350285897
Author Dr Geraldine Biddle-Perry
Format Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC