Cornrows
Cornrows are
a traditional style of hair grooming of African origin where
the hair is tightly braided very close to the scalp, using an
underhand, upward motion to produce a continuous, raised row.
Cornrows can be formed, as the name implies, in simple, straight
lines; or, in complicated geometric or curvilinear designs.
Often favored for their easy maintenance, cornrows can be left
in for weeks at a time simply by carefully washing the hair
using a stocking cap or hair net and then regularly oiling the
scalp and hair. Cornrowed hairstyles are often adorned with
beads or cowry shells, in the African tradition. Depending on
the region of the world, cornrows can be worn by either men
or women.
History of cornrows
A common way of styling hair in populations
from sub-Saharan Africa, as well as North Africa, dynastic Egypt
and the Horn, cornrows survived for centuries in the United
States and other parts of the New World as a style of hair preparation
among African slaves and their progeny. In 1963, when most African
American women were loath to be seen in public with unstraightened
hair, actress Cicely Tyson drew immediate notice when she sported
cornrows on the popular network television series "East
Side/West Side." The style gained wide popularity in the
United States in the late 1960s and 1970s as part of the Black
is beautiful movement, when the trend was to reject straightening
one's hair in favor of "natural" hairstyles. Afros,
strands of hair twisted into tight coils or wound with twine,
and the wearing of geles (in Yoruba, colorful, often elaborately
wrapped head cloths) are among the commonplace African styles
adopted by African American women.
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In the wake of the Black Pride Movement, hundreds
of beauty shops and salons sprang up across the United States
delivering services exclusively, or as part of a range of options,
to blacks who prefer natural (unstraightened) hairstyles. Many
salons specialize in hair wrapping and braiding techniques,
executing styles which can be exceedingly time-consuming and
expensive. A single, braided style can take seven hours or more
to complete, sometimes necessitating two or more salon visits.
The tradeoff in the cost in time and money expended is that
a well-executed, braided style can last a month or more without
restyling, if properly groomed and cared for\u2014and if executed
on the naturally coarse, tightly coiled hair typically possessed
by people of Sub-Saharan African descent.
Cornrows also enjoyed some popularity among
Caucasians after blonde actress Bo Derek wore beaded cornrows
in the popular Blake Edwards movie 10, and became widely popular
once again with the spread of hip-hop culture in the 1990s.
Cornrows are used by people of African ancestry
in many different regions of the world. However, some controversy
over them has emerged in Nigeria, where hair braiding among
men is alleged to be a sign of femininity or homosexuality.
Over the years, cornrows (along with dreadlocks)
have been the subject of several disputes in the American workplace
(see The Allen Iverson Movement). Some employers have deemed
them unsuitable for the office and have banned them - especially
at-will firings and/or termination. African American employees
and civil rights groups have countered that such attitudes evidence
racial and cultural bias. Some such disputes have resulted in
litigation.
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