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Can policing hair relate to community and equality, or is it solely a function of colonial militarism?

Neat hair at school is a colonial mess

Can policing hair relate to community and equality, or is it solely a function of colonial militarism?

In a country that may never recover from the deep scars of apartheid, and also, where marketing businesses should stay clear from unforeseen storms, it’s bemusing to see messaging of the Clicks type.

South Africa’s advertising industry has a long way to go

White-owned advertising agencies need to change, but fundamentally, projects aimed at black people need to be given to agencies that are black-owned or have at least demonstrated…

Hair mop: Thierry Gras, founder of the recycling association Coiffeurs Justes, stacks bags of hair from French salons to make tubes that absorb oil in harbours. (Christophe Simon/AFP)

Hair to the rescue as oil spills blight coastlines

Synthetic materials are effective in mopping up oil but human hair is cheaper and is biodegradable

We will never survive as a nation or as humans if we put up racial barriers to isolate ourselves from one another, economically, socially and politically.

Whites should stop poking the lion

Dismissing black people’s pain is dehumanising

TRESemmé’s parent company, Unilever, sells a range of skin-lightening creams and has a history of marketing them in an aggressive manner.  (Mike Coppola/Getty Images for Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week)

What’s wrong with the TRESemmé advert?

Is ‘fine and flat’ a compliment or an insult? Depends who you ask…

Heads up: Consumer boycotts, such as the Economic Freedom Fighters’ protests outside Clicks stores this week, are as powerful a weapon as they were in the 1980s, and can become as violent. (Photo: Luca Sola/AFP)

Paddy Harper: Anti-racism is the mane thing

What we want: Ramaphosa to cough up a hairball, racists in hair shirts and consumer boycotts that don’t turn hairy

Eusebius McKaiser: Arguments to challenge your inner racist

These three common responses to racism must be deconstructed until something … clicks

Mural featuring South African high school activist Zulaikha Patel

The pencil test still colours the rainbow nation illusion

This latest racist hair fiasco is just one more thing that all the darkies in me are tired of defending and explaining

(Reuters)

Can you spell ‘man bun’ in Futhark?

‘In fact, combs are among the most frequently discovered relic of Viking society, indicating that they paid a lot of attention to their hair’

Choices: A woman selling hairpiece waits for potential customers (Dahlia Maubane)

‘Woza Sisi’ tracks the ways of street hairstylists

Photographer and graphic designer Dahlia Maubane tracks the ways of street hairstylists as insight on how women use and negotiate urban spaces.

An artist’s impression of the Gibela X’Trapolis Mega train.

Felicia and my hair epiphany

"Seeing successful black women rocking different hairdos that I’d never seen before planted the love of hair into my soul"

Sans Souci Girls’ High School pupils protest against ‘discriminatory’ code of conduct

Black pupils at the school want the rules on hair and language to be scrapped.

Being female continues to be less and less about becoming womanly and more and more about staying girly.

Despite the advance of feminism, there’s still an ugly truth about keeping smooth

Females are still being told what’s in vogue – such as shaving pubic hair – and it’s less about being womanly and more about trying to stay girly.

Running was a joy for Jackie Meckler.

Warfare and difficult hair days

Black women’s hair care is still fraught with shame and politics, to start with hairdresser’s annoyance at customers not using chemicals.

Shades of Stepford: At House of Hair

Face the fro and say hello, gorgeous

Frizz is fine for men, but women must iron out or wig up? That sheitel ain’t funny, girl.

Pubes, bushy pits and kink: Four women’s hair diaries

Ahead of #MGFridayBody, an edition on body politics, we tackle beauty standards by challenging women to grow their body hair. Here are their diaries.

Tying up the loose ends of hair loss

Other than certain individuals such as Elton John and Wayne Rooney most men accept hair loss with a sense of resignation.

Hair dos and don’ts

Hair dos and don’ts

Women who wear an Afro or dreadlocks sometimes sneer at me, telling me they feel "liberated" by their natural hair, says <b>Ayanda Sitole</b>.

Straight talk: A hair-raising issue

With the issue of how black women wear their hair being more contentious than ever, Hannah Pool looks at the politics of weaves, wigs and relaxers.