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Disobedient Bodies - Reclaim Your Unruly Beauty (Main): Emma Dabiri Disobedient Bodies - Reclaim Your Unruly Beauty (Main)
Emma Dabiri
R202 Discovery Miles 2 020 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

An unmissable, radical essay from Emma Dabiri, bestselling author of Don't Touch My Hair and What White People Can Do Next What part of your beautiful self were you taught to hate? We spend a lot of time trying to improve our 'defects', according to society's ideals of beauty. But these ideals that are often reductive, tyrannical and commercially entangled, imposed upon us by oppressive systems and further strengthened by our conditioned self-loathing. This book encourages unruliness, exploring the ways in which we can rebel against and subvert the current system. Offering alternative ways of seeing beauty, drawing on other cultures, worldviews, times, and places, as well as looking beyond the capitalist model - to reconnect with our birth right and find the inherent joy in our disobedient bodies. It accompanies The Cult of Beauty, a major exhibition at Wellcome Collection in autumn 2023.

Twisted - The Tangled History of Black Hair Culture (Paperback): Emma Dabiri Twisted - The Tangled History of Black Hair Culture (Paperback)
Emma Dabiri
R491 R366 Discovery Miles 3 660 Save R125 (25%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
What White People Can Do Next - From Allyship to Coalition (Paperback): Emma Dabiri What White People Can Do Next - From Allyship to Coalition (Paperback)
Emma Dabiri
R243 R197 Discovery Miles 1 970 Save R46 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

THE SUNDAY TIMES AND IRISH TIMES BESTSELLER 'An absolute blockbuster of clear thinking and new angles...the most clear, alliance building, shame removing look at race. Emma is once-in-a generation clever' Caitlin Moran We need to talk about racial injustice in a different way: one that builds on the revolutionary ideas of the past and forges new connections. In this incisive, radical and practical essay, Emma Dabiri - acclaimed author of Don't Touch My Hair - draws on years of research and personal experience to challenge us to create meaningful, lasting change. 'Impactful . . . Emma expertly outlines how the idea of race was constructed to bolster capitalism and explains how, in a divided world, unity and coalition are needed to create a future that works for everyone' Cosmopolitan

What White People Can Do Next - From Allyship to Coalition (Paperback): Emma Dabiri What White People Can Do Next - From Allyship to Coalition (Paperback)
Emma Dabiri
R359 R267 Discovery Miles 2 670 Save R92 (26%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Don't Touch My Hair (Paperback): Emma Dabiri Don't Touch My Hair (Paperback)
Emma Dabiri 1
R338 R274 Discovery Miles 2 740 Save R64 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

'Groundbreaking . . . a scintillating, intellectual investigation into black women and the very serious business of our hair, as it pertains to race, gender, social codes, tradition, culture, cosmology, maths, politics, philosophy and history' Bernardine Evaristo Straightened. Stigmatized. 'Tamed'. Celebrated. Erased. Managed. Appropriated. Forever misunderstood. Black hair is never 'just hair'. This book is about why black hair matters and how it can be viewed as a blueprint for decolonisation. Over a series of wry, informed essays, Emma Dabiri takes us from pre-colonial Africa, through the Harlem Renaissance, Black Power and on to today's Natural Hair Movement, the Cultural Appropriation Wars and beyond. We look everything from hair capitalists like Madam C.J. Walker in the early 1900s to the rise of Shea Moisture today, from women's solidarity and friendship to 'black people time', forgotten African scholars and the dubious provenance of Kim Kardashian's braids. The scope of black hairstyling ranges from pop culture to cosmology, from prehistoric times to the (afro)futuristic. Uncovering sophisticated indigenous mathematical systems in black hairstyles, alongside styles that served as secret intelligence networks leading enslaved Africans to freedom, Don't Touch My Hair proves that far from being only hair, black hairstyling culture can be understood as an allegory for black oppression and, ultimately, liberation.

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