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Matthew Stelly

Beyond the Straightening Comb: Essays and Issues for Salvaging the Race

Beyond the Straightening Comb: Essays and Issues for Salvaging the Race

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This book will provide insights and answers to the issue of the "hot comb" and the "pressing" or "conking" of black hair so that it can approximate the texture of Caucasian hair. I begin with some background on why such behavior is collective and why it began, what the purpose is, and the link between this "process" and the presence of low Black self-esteem. Providing some information on the days of enslavement, the book addresses: (a) slavery in isolation; (b) slavery today; (c) slavery today II: the harassment sistahs and (d) slavery today III: the feminization of prison. All of these will explain the impact on black hair and the male and female attitudes about black hair. After background on "the first rite of passage" for black girls, I offer a section called, "The Realpolitik of Hair." That is followed up with "Hair and Our History: A Distorted Message," and I correct some of the errors regarding Madame C.J. Walker and other mythological messages surrounding hair alteration. "The Cost of the 'Hookup' is explained both as an economic reality and a revenue stream for non-black people. A discussion on "the beauty shop" looks into some of the psychological issues taking place as black hair, male and female, "gets done." For historical purposes our hair reflects our consciousness, hence sections providing historical snippets and analyses of: (a) the Harlem Renaissance; (b) the Civil Rights Movement; (c) the Black Nationalist Movement (with emphasis on revolutionary Black Nationalism, cultural nationalism and religious nationalism. There is also a section that is titled, "Hip Hop: A Message of Misogyny." I then take on the comments of an international hair expert regarding various scalp-related issues and then comes the focus on the young girls: (a) the role of education; (b) the role of media and hair definition; (c) stoicism and young black girls; and (d) the young girls grow up: celebrities, ghetto stars and inter-racial relationships. It should also be noted that in January of 2010, a group in Omaha sponsored a forum under the name "X Factor Outreach" and used the name of the 2-day event, "Beyond the Straighten (sic) Comb." I did not approve the poor spelling or the name of that forum. It had nothing to do with the issue of black hair but instead focused on a timeline that claimed that black people have never been together for more than a 2-year period since our presence here in America. This book is designed to provoke thought and discussion. It is meant to be a valuable contribution to our own understanding of ourselves.

Binding Type: Paperback
Author: Stelly, Matthew
Published: 04/03/2018
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
ISBN: 9781722378387
Pages: 180
Weight: 0.95lbs
Size: 11.02h x 8.50w x 0.38d
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