鈥楳y Beautiful Black Hair鈥: How a little sister鈥檚 struggle led to a celebratory book
What options are there for supporting Black women who face hair discrimination? One author鈥檚 solution: Reinforce the beauty of natural hair.
What options are there for supporting Black women who face hair discrimination? One author鈥檚 solution: Reinforce the beauty of natural hair.
鈥淢y Beautiful Black Hair: 101 Natural Hair Stories From the Sisterhood鈥 is the debut book from filmmaker and activist St. Clair Detrick-Jules. The native of Washington, D.C., courageously explores, through interviews she conducted and photos she took, the idea that Black women鈥檚 hair is inherently political 鈥 and multifaceted. Though Ms. Detrick-Jules is聽known for her award-winning 2017 documentary 鈥淒ACAmented鈥 鈥 which features young recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program sharing their stories of navigating life during the Trump administration 鈥 her latest creation uplifts a marginalized group in a different way.聽鈥淢y Beautiful Black Hair鈥 is a testament to the resilience of Black women.聽Ms. Detrick-Jules spoke with the Monitor about her inspiration for the book, published this week, and why embracing natural hair is a form of liberation. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.
How did you know your first photo book would center around the diversity and richness of Black women鈥檚 hair?
I knew that I wanted to do something for my little sister Khloe. During my last semester of college, I got a phone call from my dad saying that she was really self-conscious about her Afro. She was only 4 years old at the time. Khloe had been crying about her hair, and she didn鈥檛 want to go to school because she was so ashamed of it. She is 18 years younger than me, so I felt very protective of her. And the fact that at just 4 years old she wanted to isolate herself and not return to school because of her hair was really heartbreaking.聽
And as a big sister, your first instinct is to do something to help her.
All these thoughts went through my mind. I was like I can tell her [her] hair is beautiful. I can just sort of reinforce it. I can remind her of it. But I think that it鈥檚 one thing to tell young girls to love themselves. It鈥檚 another thing to lead by example and show them something tangible. I eventually came up with the idea of a photo book ... something that she would be able to hold and feel connected to. I wanted her to physically look at each photo and see her reflection. This is what it looks like to love yourself.
What role does the media play when it comes to how Black women feel about their hair?
I think it plays a big role and it starts at a young age. Khloe鈥檚 favorite movie is 鈥淔rozen.鈥 Obviously 鈥淔rozen,鈥 like the vast majority of Disney movies, centralizes white princesses with long straight hair. Even thinking about 鈥淭he Princess and the Frog,鈥 where you finally have a Black princess, she鈥檚 transformed into a frog. And whenever she is a woman in the film, her hair is straightened. We don鈥檛 get that visual representation of actual Black hair.
The media upholds Eurocentric beauty standards, so it鈥檚 hard to find Black women with natural hair. It鈥檚 hard to remember that our beauty is still there within us.聽
What did you learn from completing 鈥淢y Beautiful Black Hair鈥?聽
One of the women in the book says that love is an active process. That really stuck with me because before the book, I hadn鈥檛 come to a place where I totally accepted my natural hair. And now, I like my curls. But it wasn鈥檛 until I was actually making the book and talking to all these Black women and intentionally surrounding myself with Black women with natural hair that I really came to love my natural hair in a more meaningful way.聽I want the book to be remembered as a work of art, created about Black women, that brings us collective joy.
Do you consider Black women loving their hair a radical act in 2021?聽
It鈥檚 definitely a radical act because there鈥檚 so much to lose.聽I mean the CROWN Act hasn鈥檛 passed nationwide yet. There鈥檚 widespread discrimination against natural Black hair, and it鈥檚 legal in most places. It starts at school 鈥 and when we grow up, the legalized discrimination [against] natural hair in the workplace is still there. And there鈥檚 often judgment about it from the people that are supposed to love us. A few people in my book touch on that too ... how even sometimes their own family members weren鈥檛 approving of their natural hair textures.
There is a lot to lose when we choose ourselves and our hair, knowing that there could be backlash from all facets of society. While we may lose some social acceptance or financial stability, the trade-off is liberation 鈥 so I think it鈥檚 worth it.聽