Health Books and Videos
 Location:  Home» Health Books » Tenderheaded: A Comb-Bending Collection of Hair Stories  
Advertisement
New Releases
Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell
The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2008 (Best American Nonrequired Reading)
P.S.: Further Thoughts from a Lifetime of Listening
This I Believe II: More Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women
Promised Land: Thirteen Books That Changed America
Fear and Loathing at Rolling Stone: The Essential Hunter S. Thompson
The Horror Stories of Robert E. Howard
The Vorkosigan Companion
The Selected Letters of Allen Ginsberg and Gary Snyder, 1956-1991
The Norman Maclean Reader
Bestsellers
1.The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World (Vintage)
2.Atlas Shrugged
3.The Wit and Wisdom of Abraham Lincoln: A Book of Quotations (Thrift Edition)
4.Atlas Shrugged (Centennial Ed. HC)
5.The Great Gatsby
6.Fahrenheit 451
7.The Fountainhead
8.Their Eyes Were Watching God
9.For Whom the Bell Tolls
10.Leaves of Grass: The Original 1855 Edition (Thrift Edition)
Most Gifted
1.Atlas Shrugged
2.The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World (Vintage)
3.Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence Between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell
4.Atlas Shrugged (Centennial Ed. HC)
5.The Fountainhead
6.This I Believe II: More Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women
7.The Border Trilogy: All the Pretty Horses, the Crossing, Cities of the Plain (Everyman's Library)
8.A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (P.S.)
9.Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
10.Promised Land: Thirteen Books That Changed America
Most Wished For
1.The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World (Vintage)
2.Atlas Shrugged
3.Fahrenheit 451
4.The Great Gatsby
5.The Grapes of Wrath (Centennial Edition)
6.Of Mice and Men (Steinbeck Centennial Edition)
7.For Whom the Bell Tolls
8.Promised Land: Thirteen Books That Changed America
9.The Fountainhead
10.The Sun Also Rises

Tenderheaded: A Comb-Bending Collection of Hair Stories

Tenderheaded: A Comb-Bending Collection of Hair Stories

enlarge enlarge 
Creators: Pamela Johnson, Juliette Harris, Ntozake Shange
Publisher: Washington Square Press
Category: Book

List Price: $14.00
Buy New: $2.20
You Save: $11.80 (84%)



New (31) Used (25) Collectible (1) from $2.13

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 544232

Media: Paperback
Pages: 320
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.5 x 0.8

ISBN: 0671047566
Dewey Decimal Number: 810.8035
EAN: 9780671047566
ASIN: 0671047566

Publication Date: January 29, 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
What could make a smart woman ignore doctor's orders?

What could get a hardworking employee fired from her job?

What could get a black woman in hot water with her white boyfriend?

In a word...

HAIR.

When does a few ounces feel like a few tons? When a doctor advises a black woman to start an exercise program and she wonders how she can do it without breaking a sweat. When an employer fires her for wearing a cultural hairstyle that's "unprofessional," and she has to go to court to plead for her job. When she's with her man, and the moment she's supposed to let loose, she stops to secure her head scarf so he doesn't disturb the 'do.

TENDERHEADED?

Yes, definitely. All black women are, in one way or another.

The issue is not only about looking good, but about feeling adequate in a society where the beauty standards are unobtainable for most women. Tenderheaded boldly throws open the closet where black women's skeletons have been threatening to burst down the door. In poems, essays, cartoons, photos, and excerpts from novels and plays, women and men speak to the meaning hair has for them, and for society. In an intimate letter, A'Leila Perry Bundles pays tribute to her great-grandmother, hair-care pioneer Madam C.J. Walker, who launched a generation of African-American businesswomen. Corporate consultant Cherilyn "Liv" Wright interviews men and women on the hilarious ways they handle "the hair issue" between the sheets. Art historian Henry John Drewal explores how hairstyles, in Yoruba culture, indicate spiritual destiny, and activist Angela Davis questions how her message of revolution got reduced to a hairstyle.

Tenderheaded is as rich and diverse as the children of the African diaspora. With works by Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, bell hooks, Henry Louis Gates Jr., and other writers of passion, persuasion, and humor -- this is sure to be one of the most talked-about books of the year.


Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Multiple Viewpoints   August 15, 2006
A. Matthews (Florence, SC)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a wonderful book for anyone who would like to explore the issues that Black women face vis a vis our hair from a variety of viewpoints; not just the "politicaly correct" ones.


5 out of 5 stars For sombody wanting to look deeper into Black hair...   July 9, 2006
Lillith X. (Down South)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The book was all that, very positive, and at times emotional (I'm thinking of the passage where a father is trying to figure out how to braid his daughter's hair since her mother is across the country. His trying, and eventually getting it right, turned into bonding sessions for them. It was beautiful.) Of course the book had my favorite culture critic, bell hooks, and as usual she gave me a new persepective: to look at the whole "perm" phenomena as initiation into womanhood. Just about any Black woman who was on the brink of adolescence and was dying to get a perm should relate to that. I did. That's what this book does, it helps Black women to see just how similar our trials have been with our hair; and it's not just a generational thing. Black women from 50 to 80 years ago had the same issues and thoughts Black teenagers have today. Everyone remembers hot combs and Goody pink rollers and Royal Crown grease. Looking back many women had feelings of remembered pain, and not just from the burns on the tips of their ears and on their scalps, but inside their hearts for our collective struggle with an unattainable beauty standard.
What I also admired about this book was that it touched on the subject of hair and erotic intimacy. There was a whole section devoted to hearing the responses of Black women and men when confronted with the bedroom question: Can I run my fingers through your hair? It showed a depraved relation to our hair. In order to get and keep that salon fresh look, sleek and shiny, it must not be touched (by you and most especially your lover). Hair does not bring pleasure in the sense of us luxuriating in how it feels. How can you when it's not even yours? Weave. A woman tells the story of a young man with whom she was getting intimate with, and he wanted to run his fingers through her seemingly long shiny tresses. The moment was interrupted when he felt the hard tracks on her scalp before she could effectively slap his touch away. "You have to train these men early," another woman admonishes, "not to touch the hair." A man married for over 20 years complains of his wife's hair roller pins always poking him when she's "going down on him." He also hates, but has gotten used to, her wearing a head scarf anytime they make love. It is described in the book as Black folks having perpetual menege trios, he, she, and the head scarf. Another man wakes up to his girlfriend's "100% Korean Hair" all over the bed and floor after an especially heated night; he later ends up paying $200 dollars to have it all put back in again. The women speak of not even wanting to touch their own hair, refering to it being "hard as a rock" from gels and hair sprays. It's all in the name of a certain look, the processed one. (It's this look that lured their mates in the first place right?) It's sad that Black women talk about orchestrating certain sex positions around not messing up their fresh 'do. "You don't even think about it after while." They compensate not allowing their men to touch their hair with confidence and boldness in their performance, "It's so good he won't even be thinking about touching my hair."

I love this book. It isn't just politics or just us behind closed doors. Every possible reference to what is done to our hair is mentioned, even going bald. A Muslim woman opened my eyes to how not showing her hair takes away from having to compete for attentions based on beauty standards of hair, by being above them. It reminds us that as women, we shouldn't let physical beauty define us, even though most times it does, and we let it. "Ms. Strand" tells her tale with humor, cultural criticism, African storytelling, and 'round tha way truthfulness, barring nothing from the conversation. Truly, Tenderheaded should not be passed over.




2 out of 5 stars Disappointing   January 5, 2005
titilayo (Barbados, West Indies)
2 out of 5 found this review helpful

I expected to really enjoy this book, but was disappointed. Some of the stories/essays were very good, but some of them were poorly written and/or could have done with some serious editing. It might have been better if some of them had been omitted: the book would probably have been half as long, but the overall quality would have been significantly improved.

I was also disappointed by the way the book was laid out. It seemed jumbled and poorly conceived. Photos, illustrations and cartoons/comics were seemingly thrown in randomly, with little context or relation to the surrounding content. The graphic content of the book was good, but the layout just did not display it to full advantage.

The idea behind this book was a good one, but the execution could have been a little bit better.



5 out of 5 stars worth reading   June 22, 2004
Miss M Abena-Yoko (london,united kingdom)
0 out of 5 found this review helpful

very good,worth reading,written by various people.....
enjoyable,gets you thinking,nice photographs too.
As you may or may not know African coyly hair is quite unique in vision, texture, behaviour and probably in chemical make up too. Coily haired women around the world, go to the most extremes in terms of spending.
(Spending time, spending pain and the spending price to have African coily hair styled)
A hairstyle that we believe looks good or will help us to become socially and economically advanced.
Or maybe for our own self-esteem and maybe to attract the charms of a love interest. Either way your hair is a reflection of the state of your consciousness, your internal beliefs and your relationship with the world.

This book is like having group therapy or interviewing other women,but it is not all black women's views.I am reviewng it because I think it is worth a read.

As you may or may not know African coily hair is quite unique in vision, texture, behaviour and probably in chemical make up too. Coily haired women around the world, go to the most extremes in terms of spending.
(Spending time, spending pain and the spending price to have African coily hair styled)
A hairstyle that we believe looks good or will help us to become socially and economically advanced.
Or maybe for our own self-esteem and maybe to attract the charms of a love interest.
Either way, psychologically and philosophically I believe that your hair is a reflection of the state of your consciousness, your internal beliefs and your relationship with the world.
What about exploring physics through african hair?
For example how much pressure, gravity and tension and tearing do we put our hair through by combing it?
let alone excessive harsh combing.
Mathematically speaking how many of you readers can tell me how many curls/coils per inch your hair has, and does it vary in coil and moisture?
Next question:When does the nature of the hair change and why?
(i know it does!)
It seems to me all these books on afro hair are good and I welcome it, but we still need to be more informed and they all seem to need better editing, just like Black American beauty magazines.I must campaign for better grammar and less air brushed photos!!!
It is as if we like to see ourselves falsely rather than the reality of what we are...
Black women need to demand more scientific reasoning from our books and be less competitive over black men which only fuels their egos and as a result probably creates more baby-mothers!!!
Sorry but I had to vent out my opinions.

I give this book four stars for the effort and time invested as a writer I know it takes time...
I maintain that it is still worth reading,more than any carcinogenic chemical so called hair treatment that you pay for.

Anyway what do I know I am a black african british woman!!!!
Most of you Americans think we in Britain have no trains or any kind of progressive development!!!
Anyway if I wrote my book answering my questions that I put to you how many of you would buy it?


5 out of 5 stars All That You Want To Know   February 28, 2004
K. Greene
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a very unique book. I have to say I LOVED IT! My being a young black woman, all the stories hit close to home. This book gave a non-bias look at black women's hair, and black culture all around the world including here in America. It gave many view points, from men women, blacks and even whites. I recommed this book to anyone who is confused about their hair and themselves. Nappy is defiantly Happy!!!! Peace.

.
Categories
Health Books
Diet Books
Workout DVD
Workout VHS
Whole Body Vibrators
Back Pain
Pilates Videos
Sexual Health
Subcategories
Classics
Related Categories
• United States
World Literature
Literature & Fiction
Subjects
Books
Advertisement

   
Copyright 1998-2008 HealthStatus.com. All rights reserved.