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The hidden racist history of hair loss


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The hidden ******* history of hair loss

Hair loss is common in men and women, particularly with age—for example, androgenetic alopecia (or pattern baldness) affects

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. For the most part, it can be physically inconsequential.

Yet, modern society has a distaste for hair loss. Look at how news stories have speculated about whether 10-year-old Prince George and his younger brother, Louis, will inherit their father’s “

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.”

The market in hair restoration procedures is projected to be worth

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by 2026. You can even purchase wigs for ******* that proclaim to make children up to three years old “
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.”

It wasn’t always this way. In many cultures and periods of history, baldness has been revered, from ancient Egypt to the 18th century people of Issini (modern-day Ghana). Shaved and bald heads could represent purity, a rejection of superficiality, and be ritualized through daily shaving.

Bald heads have also been positively associated with divinity. Medieval and ********** art includes

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and
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. Today, Buddhist monks, nuns and
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routinely shave their heads.

In the west in the 19th century, baldness also came to be celebrated. But rather than for religious reasons, it was for pseudoscientific ones that were tied in with harmful ideas about intelligence and race. It set a precedent for a Eurocentric bias in hair-loss research that continues to this day.

Eugenicists and hair loss

Ten years after Charles Darwin published his famous evolutionary thesis “On The Origin of Species” in 1859, his cousin Francis Galton extended it to suggest that some groups of humans were

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. Galton and others used any observable differences in humans, including variation in skin ****** and hair, as “proof” of distinct human races, some of which were supposedly superior to others.

****** people in particular were pseudoscientifically classified as being differently haired and evolutionarily inferior to white people. Victorian

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regarded ****** people’s hair as animal fur, arguing they had been the same “blackskinned, wooly-headed animal for the last 2,000 years.”

Related to eugenics was the pseudoscience of phrenology, which attempted to predict traits like personality and morality from physical characteristics. These included a person’s head shape, complexion and head hair amount. Phrenology, which has been thoroughly discredited, was used to uphold

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, the idea that race is biological and that some races are superior to others.

The Victorian writer Henry Frith wrote in his 1891 book,

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: “The hairless men are the intellectual ones: their mental and bodily strength are both considerable … brain dominates matter in the bald.”

Such ideas were combined with the false belief in white men’s superiority and intelligence compared to other “hairier” races. Frith wrote: “White and, comparatively, hairless races hav[e] dominion in the world [over the] strong, wild, hairy races.”

********* medical students

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“that slaves, Indians, women and donkeys never go bald because of their small and undeveloped brains.” In 1902, medical doctor David Walsh
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a book on hair ********* in which he stated: “Baldness is practically unknown among savages.”

Shockingly, such eugenicist logic remained unchallenged until the late 20th century. In 1966, the dermatologist

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concluded: “In ******** races baldness is a rarity and virtually unknown in many semi-civilized communities.”

Diversity in hair loss matters

Today, such false beliefs are thankfully rare in science. However, as in many areas of medical research,

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predominantly focus on white people, ignoring or excluding other ******* groups.

Social psychologist Hannah Frith (no relation) and I

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that collectively researched more than 10,000 balding men. We found almost all of the research participants were ********* or ******, with just 1% from South America or *******.

Meanwhile, dermatologists and other hair-loss practitioners continue to routinely study medical textbooks that only include images of

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.

This is a problem because, as recent (and limited) research shows, hair loss is common in all ******* and ******* groups. A 2022

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reviewed data from almost 200,000 *** men (aged 38–73). The researchers found 68% of white men reported hair loss compared to 64% of South ****** men and 59% of ****** men. (The relatively small differences are partially explained by the fact the white men in the study were older).

There are also forms of hair loss that are known to be more common in people of ******. For example, ****** women are more likely to have

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, an autoimmune condition that causes hair loss.

****** people are more likely to develop

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, a hair loss type related to constant pulling of the hair follicles including through tight hairstyles. This condition highlights the impact of a ******* society on hair.

Specifically, ****** people may feel compelled to conceal their afro-textured hair (stereotyped as uncivilized) through weaves, braids and chemical relaxers. All of these practices can be physically damaging, including to the hair follicles.

Alopecia resources that are racially inclusive (by the

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) help dermatologists make more realistic recommendations that situate people’s hair concerns within their societal and cultural contexts.

A better understanding of the racism of hair loss research is important. It reminds us that neither the texture, ****** nor amount of hair a person has conveys anything meaningful about them, evolutionarily or otherwise.

Provided by
The Conversation


This article is republished from

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under a Creative Commons license. Read the
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.

Citation:
The hidden ******* history of hair loss (2024, March 19)
retrieved 20 March 2024
from

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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