Body Talk and Cultural Identity in the African World - Augustine Agwuele

Body Talk and Cultural Identity in the African World - Augustine Agwuele

9. Nonverbal Message: Yoruba View of "Deviant" Male Hairstyles

Body Talk and Cultural Identity in the African World - Augustine Agwuele

Augustine Agwuele [+-]
Texas State University
Department of Anthropology Areas of interest: Linguistics, Cultural Studies, African studies, Socio-cultural linguistics

Description

Every society attributes certain significance, meaning to appearance and non-aural symbolic expressions. As non-verbal signal, the view, use, meaning and interpretations of hairstyles are culturally rooted and specific, while reflecting varied approaches to cultural globalization. This paper is a systematic study of the judgments that a society and individuals make about non-verbal signals, exemplified using hairstyle. Specifically, it aims at understanding those internalized values that trigger the judgments that invariably inform actions (positive or negative) directed at the person. More specifically, it is interested in understanding the source of “beliefs” that drive perception, judgment and invariably action. The point of departure for the discussion will be Yoruba people with respect to the way they perceive and treat people with dreadlocks.

Notify A Colleague

Citation

Agwuele, Augustine. 9. Nonverbal Message: Yoruba View of "Deviant" Male Hairstyles. Body Talk and Cultural Identity in the African World. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 162-180 Dec 2015. ISBN 9781781791868. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=24097. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.24097. Dec 2015

Dublin Core Metadata