'Nappy' has good, bad connotations

By MONICA HAYNES
Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Tight. Kinky. Coiled.

All three have been used to define the word "nappy," and, historically, the term nappy has been used to describe the hair that grows from the heads of most African-Americans.

While accurate based purely on the definition, it has been perceived by many as an insult to be called "nappy-headed." Undeniably, radio shock jock Don Imus' reference to the Rutgers University's women's basketball team last week as "nappy-headed hos" was demeaning and degrading.

Imus has been suspended for two weeks amid calls for his ouster, and the basketball team has agreed to meet with him at his request.

His comments, however, have raised once again the ghost of racism past and its lingering impact.

All would agree about the derogatory reference to hos (whores), but there's a movement among African-Americans to reclaim the word nappy as something positive.

The tightly wound curls of African- Americans have been involved in as much verbal tugging and pulling as they have physical attempts to dekinkify them.

In her 1977 song "All the Way Love," R&B singer Millie Jackson scolds women who are concerned about intimacy because it might mess up their hair.

During her rap she states, "He probably couldn't get his fingers through your hair no way as nappy as it is."

Jackson's use is the historically negative context in which hair that is not smooth and straight is a problem.

In the upcoming film "Nappily Ever After," based on the Trisha Thomas book by the same name, Halle Berry will portray a woman who shaves off her chemically treated hair. She must then deal with her perception of herself as well as how others perceive her.

For some, however, whether the term "nappy-headed" is a good or a bad thing depends on who uses the term and how it's said.

"A while back when African-Americans said 'nappy headed' it was said either as a put-down or it was said routinely about other blacks," said author and political analyst Earl Ofari Hutchinson.

Imus' use was clearly a put-down, he said. "It didn't matter if (the basketball team) had the straightest hair on the planet," Hutchinson said. "He said it to make them the butt of ridicule."

An example of a matter-of-fact use?

The opening line of Stevie Wonder's song "I Wish," which states "Lookin' back on when I was a little nappy-headed boy."

In this song about Wonder's youth, the term "nappy-headed" is merely a description.. Hutchinson said most African-Americans don't use the term anymore, preferring the politically uncharged "bad hair day."

Still, there is a nagging negative perception among African- Americans. It is that perception that Linda Jones and others are trying to change.

"I heard the term (nappy) because it was the way our hair was described. It didn't have chemicals in it, and it was tightly coiled and kinky," said Jones, a journalist and founder of Nappy Hair Affair, which promotes African-American culture and identity.

"We were conditioned to feel bad about it because in calling someone that, it was meant to be an insult when actually it was just a statement of truth," said Jones, author of the book "Nappyism: Affirmations for Nappy-Headed People and Wannabes."

"It's a state of being strong and resilient," she said. "We didn't see the positive aspects of having hair texture like that."

(Monica Haynes can be reached at mhaynes(at)post-gazette.com or 412-263-1660.)

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