rihanna’s doobie

rihanna-amas-hairat sunday’s american music awards rihanna rocked a hairstyle many black women have donned since the advent of relaxers — the doobie wrap.  usually worn under a scarf and secured with bobby pins, it’s a protective hairstyle used to maintain our hair’s shape without having to use heat the next day.  most black women wouldn’t run to the convenience store, let alone attend a major event rocking a doobie.  wearing a doobie in public is like leaving your home in your pjs — it’s just inappropriate.

i often interrogate the varied meanings of appropriateness, examining their relationship to respectability politics and the dominant white culture.  i’m keenly aware that black folks often use similar language to refer to or reinforce white supremacy.  however, in the case of doobiegate, white people were enamored, not put off, by rihanna’s hair and miley cyrus has probably fired her hairstylist for not hipping her to this trend sooner.  therefore, it is with my blackest sensibilities that i am extremely annoyed by rihanna’s incessant need to prove how many damns she doesn’t give and black academics’ need to explain her doobie as a form of protest.  refusing to comb your relaxed hair is not revolutionary — it’s attention seeking.  further, i don’t believe rihanna would have chosen to rock this hairstyle at a traditionally “black” awards show; the same shock value wouldn’t have been present.

should progressive black folks give kudos to every act we perceive as an example of “authentic” blackness?  what does it mean when said action is based upon a stereotype — here the welfare queen comes to mind? when does being beholden to our culture and history cross the line into minstrelsy? is the boundary between appropriate vs. inappropriate universal, especially given its racialized history?  at a time when cultural appropriation is at an all time high, rihanna’s doobie calls into question more than just black women’s hairstyles.

Follow:

2 Comments

  1. November 26, 2013 / 3:37 pm

    I think this is interesting and we can choose to look at it two ways.. when i saw it i didn’t associate a black woman’s wrap hairstyle because personally i never saw a black woman wrap her hair at night. only being exposed to natural hair im not familiar with the care a relaxer takes. instead when i saw this, i saw the old school glamour of the 1920s and the various flapper hairstyles worn by white and black women alike. it was very tasteful to me, it also made me think why do we put labels on certain hairstyles, we are the ones that deem something as ghetto, maybe if we take the negative connotation away from certain black hairstyles we can appreciate the versatility that our hair has.

  2. r evolution ary
    November 26, 2013 / 4:54 pm

    This is perfection. Great post.

Politics & Fashion Newsletter