My Watson Adventures

I've got twelve months to learn about hair braiding around the globe...wish me luck!

Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Oz continued...

So my initial plan was to volunteer at a salon as a braider, or even as a hairsweeper, but I found that salon owners weren’t really receptive to that idea; instead, they agreed to allow me to visit their salons to conduct interviews with the staff and clientele, observe their hair creations, and photograph the styles, which turned out to be a pretty good arrangement anyway. I frequented three such salons: Ambo Ars Hair Salon, Serengeti Hair Salon, and Afrique Ali’s Hair Salon.

In addition to my salon visits, I would also interview random people that I ran into on the street with braided styles. Initially, I was apprehensive about approaching people to ask them about their hair - I thought they'd think I was crazy - but I found that people actually liked talking about their hair, especially when their style was unique, and I met some really interesting people that way.

Through my salon visits and random street encounters, I was able to speak to members of the White, Asian, and Immigrant Black communities of Sydney. My only regret was not being able to penetrate and learn more about the Indigenous Black community. While writing my Watson proposal, I had speculated that the Aboriginal peoples would have a hair braiding culture because of their hair texture, and I was disappointed when the stylists told me that this was not the case. I was not convinced; and after contacting Aboriginal community organizations as well as Message Stick TV, the Aboriginal TV program, and getting no real leads, I decided to head to the University of Sydney to see if they had any Aboriginal student organizations.

At the Koori Centre at the University, I was introduced to one of the Aboriginal lecturers, Shino Konishi, who is currently working on her doctoral dissertation which happens to be on the topic of Indigenous hairstyles at the time of First Contact with the European settlers - what a coincidence! Shino explained to me that even though the Indigenous people of Australia no longer have a braiding culture (it is believed that they probably did have one before being forced to assimilate after the European settlers arrived), a braiding/locking culture still exists in Tasmania and the Pacific Islands. I was really disappointed to find this out like a week before I was due to head to Japan, but she gave me the contact of another Koori Centre lecturer, Leah Lui-Chivizhe from the Torres Strait Islands, whom she said "had hair like mine."

So I e-mailed Leah and we were able to meet up the next week for coffee. Leah explained to me that women in the Torres Strait Islands do braid their hair but not in a stylized fashion. She shared her hairstory with me and I learned that Indigenous women have the same hang-ups about hair texture that Black women do. Aside from hair, Leah and I had something else in common - Jamaican roots (Jamaicans are everywhere, I tell you)! One of her grandfathers was from Jamaica and had immigrated to the Torres Strait Islands where he met her grandmother - craziness! Anyway, she also told me about how she braids her young daughter's hair, and how those hairstyles elicit mixed reactions from her daughter's classmates and their parents, which brought back memories. Honestly, I think we could've talked for hours but we were forced to end our hair talk because she had to go teach a class. Even though I didn't get a chance to speak with more people from the Pacific Islands, I was glad to at least have the opportunity to get an Aboriginal perspective on hair braiding.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Oz





After about 24 hours of traveling, including a stop over in Los Angeles, I finally made it to Sydney, Australia on August 3rd, 2006, which marked the beginning of an unforgettable month in the Land Down Under.

With the help of my wonderful friend Toni and the staff of Arcadia University's Center for Education Abroad, I was able to find a place to live for the month (thank you T. Lenoah!) - at 49-53 Regent Street, an apartment building for study-abroad students in Sydney. Initially, I was supposed to live in a single but Andy Franks, Arcadia's Residential Advisor, figured that I'd get lonely, and placed me in an apartment with three roomies...and I'm so glad that she did - my roommates, Madison Wood, Jessie Sommers, and Kate Sauerwein, turned out to be three of the sweetest girls that I've ever met.



My time in Oz was BUSY but isn't that the story of my life? In addition to my Watson research, I was trying to study for the LSAT (not fun), AND spend time being a tourist in Sydney! Splitting my time between the three wasn't easy, especially since there was so much to do and see in Sydney, but I did the best I could with the time that I had... I must admit, when I got to Sydney, I really had no idea of where to start with my research. I knew that I wanted to focus on salons, because I figured that braided styles in Oz would be more of a popular culture thing rather than a traditional practice, but didn't have the chance to contact any salons before I left Toronto. So I turned to my good ol' friend Google for help...and discovered that most of the "ethnic" salons in Sydney were located in a neighborhood called Newtown, and Newtown is where I ended up spending most of the month.












Thursday, October 12, 2006

I have a blog!

Okay, so I know this is loooooong overdue but things have been crazy (but what else is new?)
I hope to create my own website eventually (blog included), but for now this will have to suffice.
I can't believe that two months have gone by so quickly! First, Australia, then Japan, and now I find myself in Delhi, India. So I have a LOT of catching up to do, in terms of posting pictures and letting you know how things have been going...sigh...but everything in due time!

Love,
Dija