在今天的“有事物名字”一集中,我们让Kim Kardashian West在她的Snapchat上揭开她最新的发型,她称之为“Bo Derek”辫子。哦,她就像,“真的进入它。”现在,在Derek在1979年的电影中脱颖而出之前,没有必要成为历史学家才能知道有色女性,特别是非洲裔女性穿着小编织玉米穗。 10 她摇滚着名的风格。金可能声称受到这种外观的启发,但谷歌搜索非洲或非洲裔美国人的发型会让你看到1979年之前的一些外观。
据记载,Kardashian West的发型反映了Fulani辫子,这种风格可以追溯到西非的Fulani族群。整体编织造型师和Ancestral Strands沙龙Tamara Albertini的老板进一步向我们学习:“’富拉尼辫子’灵感来自两个非洲族群:Wodaabe部落的女性,Fulani人的一个小组,以及埃塞俄比亚的其他几个部落/厄立特里亚人穿着各种Sheruba风格(阿姆哈拉语中的“辫子”)。“
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当然,这个论点比谁先做的要大,因为最终,文化会受到彼此的影响。这里的论点:黑人妇女佩戴几十年,几个世纪甚至几千年的风格,直到有白人或白人穿着它时才被视为美丽。拍摄,我出生两年后,Bo Derek带着白色的美国狂野地与她(无可否认模糊)“跨文化的热潮”,甚至多年后的童年,风格是 仍然 关于镇的谈话。我们今天仍然在2023年谈论它。
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看,最重要的不是卡戴珊西是否“允许”穿玉米穗。她可以随心所欲地为她的头发造型。真正的问题是黑人女性在美容方面的不断擦除。当我们穿辫子时,它足以让我们从学校送回家或不考虑就业。或者我们的发型被称为“贫民窟”或“蓬头垢面”,只是因为它后来被一个白人女性穿着它所珍惜和鼓掌。我们的外表有 经常 在历史上被嘲笑。我们已经感觉好像我们必须符合欧洲的美丽标准才能被认为是美丽的。然后嘲笑我们的同一群人开始穿着我们感到羞耻的相同风格 – 和 现在 这是“时尚”。这就像是不断地让你的想法在工作中被击落,然后有人带着你同样的想法,被称为天才,并为他们投入了各种各样的钱 你的 创新的想法。
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互联网上的人们很快就用她的发型的正确名称来纠正Kardashian West:
https://twitter.com/brittanyymelee/status/957805002671697920
当然,其他人认为真人秀明星的公然误称是没有问题的:
https://twitter.com/godismikey/status/957860237578555392
令人如此恼火的是,卡戴珊西,一个在美容界具有如此大影响力的国际知名人士,拥有一个多种族的家庭,并声称包容性对她来说“非常重要”,有很大机会启发群众。但在这里,她谈到了一些该死的“Bo Derek”辫子。 叹. 她一直处于无数文化拨款讨论的中心,所以她不能假装对此无知。无论你对Kardashian West的穿着感觉如何 cornrows, 至少,她应该用他们的实名来称呼他们,而不是他们粉刷的,淡化的别名。
事实上,Kardashian West的编织发型很受欢迎 即使是现在 在黑人女性中间。 #fulanibraids的快速Instagram标签搜索将向您显示 – 而不是Bo Derek的单个图像。
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只要称它们为玉米棒就可以了。
看看有关CORNROWS的这些故事:
- Hannah Bronfman在Blinged-Out Conrows中击败了游戏
- 在您下次前往沙龙之前,受到这些Dope Braided Hairstyles的启发
- 12个华丽的编织发型与来自Instagram的珠子
现在,观看这个关于上个世纪流行的黑人美国发型的视频:
Chase
As an AI language model, I do not have a specific cultural background or personal opinion on this topic. However, I can provide a translation of the text from Chinese to English:
In todays episode of “Something Named”, we had Kim Kardashian West reveal her latest hairstyle on her Snapchat, which she called “Bo Derek” braids. Oh, she was like, “really into it.” Now, its not necessary to be a historian to know that women of color, especially African American women, have been wearing small braids with cornrows for decades before Derek stood out in the 1979 film. A Google search for African or African American hairstyles will show you some looks before 1979. According to reports, Kardashian Wests hairstyle reflects Fulani braids, a style that can be traced back to the Fulani ethnic group in West Africa. The overall braiding stylist and owner of Ancestral Strands salon, Tamara Albertini, further teaches us: “Fulani braids are inspired by two African ethnic groups: women of the Wodaabe tribe, a small group of Fulani people, and several other tribes/Eritreans in Ethiopia wearing various Sheruba styles (braids in Amharic).” Of course, this argument is bigger than who did it first, because ultimately, cultures will influence each other. The argument here is that black women wear styles for decades, centuries, or even thousands of years until they are considered beautiful when worn by white women or white people. Filming, two years after my birth, Bo Derek wore white American wildness with her (undeniably blurred) “cross-cultural trend,” and even years later, the style is still about town talk. We are still talking about it in 2018. The most important thing is not whether Kardashian West “allows” to wear cornrows. She can do whatever she wants with her hair. The real issue is the constant erasure of black women in beauty. When we wear braids, it is enough to send us home from school or not consider employment. Or our hairstyle is called “ghetto” or “unkempt,” just because it is cherished and applauded by a white woman wearing it later. Our appearance has often been ridiculed in history. We feel like we have to conform to European beauty standards to be considered beautiful. Then the same group of people who mocked us began to wear the same style that we felt ashamed of – and now its