On Wednesday, Elle UK
called baby hair a "trend" and credited Katy Perry for inspiring
it. They were wrong black women have been rocking this look for
decades.
Sadly, this isn’t the first
time a popular and traditional black hairstyle has been appropriated.
There
are many hairstyles black women and girls wear that directly correlate with
their identity and culture, but mainstream media often doesn’t seem to
recognize it and bashes them when they do.
These
looks are often deemed unacceptable or "trendy" until they are worn
by white women -- but we want to set the record straight.
Here
are eight instances where black hairstyles have been borrowed, described as
cool and taken without credit:
When Kylie Jenner “woke up like disss” in cornrows
More than 1.3 million
people liked this photo of Jenner posing in a crop top and her hair braided in
cornrows last week. However, the comments below it didn't share the same praise
-- actress Amandla Stenberg called out Jenner for appropriating black
culture and not using her platform to speak out about critical issues in the
black community. Stenberg later followed up with a separate and more detailed note asking:
“Do female black lives matter, too?”
Another Jenner takes cornrows to "a new epic level
In 2014, Marie Claire posted a tweet with a photo
of Kendall Jenner describing her half-braided style as "new" and
"epic.” Black Twitter didn’t let that slide, however, as users called out
the magazine for failing to acknowledge that this hairstyle has been worn by
black men and women for decades.
Let’s circle back to Kylie Jenner
When this Jenner sister wore faux dreadlocks for a
“desert rebel” cover story in Teen Vogue, she was described as edgy, raw and
beautiful. Zendaya wore
the same hairstyle this year but was bashed for it. "Fashion
Police" host Giuliana Rancic said she looked like she "smells like
patchouli oil or weed.” Zendaya clapped back, writing a powerful response
on Instagram defending black people and their dreadlocks.
Yet another baby hair mishap
Like Elle UK, Lucky
Magazine was mistaken about baby hair, too. During New York Fashion Week last
September, Lucky referred to the style as “slicked-down tendrils.”
Though this style is a bit more drastic than how black people traditionally
wear it, the gelled-down concept is similar.
Bo Derek is the standard for cornrows. Yea, right
The Jenner sisters aren’t
the only ones being lauded for taking cornrows to “bold” heights. In 2014, the Los Angeles Times credited Bo Derek as the
standard for cornrows when they mentioned three other white women who were
supposedly coming for her title. Not one black woman was mentioned.
Rita Ora's afro wig and box braids aren't fooling
anyone
Even though Rita Ora looks
racially ambiguous, she is Kosovar-Albanian. In a photo shoot for Hunger
TV, Ora wore a blonde wig and the Daily Mail credited her with having a “unique sense of style.” Refinery29
called her box braids“hairspiration.” Hairspiration? Please.
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