Hair – we all have it, but have you ever really thought about it?
Emma Tarlo is a professor of anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of London. She regularly gives public lectures worldwide and contributes to BBC Radio programmes and news articles. Her previous books include Clothing Matters, winner of the 1998 Coomaraswamy Prize, and Visibly Muslim. She lives in Camden, London.
‘Tarlo is excellent at elucidating the vanity, money, pain and
revulsion that unattached hair can represent. Think you know hair?
You’ll never see it in the same way again.’
*Independent*
‘If you’re curious about your roots, you’ll enjoy exploring UK
anthropology professor Emma Tarlo’s Entanglement a brilliant,
comprehensive Baedeker to the billion dollar global hair
trade.’
*Elle*
‘By turns surprising, unsettling and disturbing but never anything
less than absorbing…weaving in history, politics and science in an
interlocking, mesmerising narrative that seems wholly appropriate
to the subject’.
*Literary Review*
‘Brilliant...Entanglement tracks its subject doggedly through
an almost infinite number of twists and turns.’
*Times Literary Supplement*
‘Entanglement is dense with colourful characters and startling,
unexpected information, which makes it both exhausting and
delightful. Tarlo brings a lovely open-mindedness and a deadpan
sense of humour to her writing.’
*New York Times Book Review*
‘Tarlo uses an ethnographer’s eye to analyse the religious, social,
cultural and commercial forces that drive the industry. Yet her
book reads like a travelogue as we follow her through the temple
towns of India, the hair factories of China, the sorting sheds of
Myanmar and the salons of Europe and Britain… By employing an
anecdotal yet vigorously researched approach, Tarlo succeeds in
untangling a knotty topic while keeping the reader engaged through
400-plus pages. The result is a fascinating and authoritative
work.’
*John Zubrzycki, The Australian*
‘Interesting – and, at times strange’.
*Times*
'Clever, idiosyncratic…lively…full of amusing, “fancy that”
information and arresting observations…what a rich subject Tarlo
has chosen for her book’.
*New Statesman*
‘Wonderful…it’s not often a book gives you new eyes for your
everyday world’.
*The Oldie*
‘I had no idea that a non-fiction book about hair could be quite so
fascinating’.
*The Pool*
‘The questions she examines and the “secret lives of hair” that she
exposes are fascinating… An engrossing investigation.’
*Library Journal, starred review*
‘This is a book about the only crop we routinely harvest from our
own bodies – hair. From that disconnection come amazing tales:
histories of paupers and pedlars in Europe, vast global trades in
wigs, poignant stories of chemotherapy and memorialisation...Tarlo
has done an extraordinary job of reattaching hair to humanity.’
*Daniel Miller, professor of anthropology, University College
London, and author of Stuff and The Comfort of
Things*
‘I will never think about hair the same way after reading Emma
Tarlo’s brilliant, fascinating book!’
*Valerie Steele, author of The Corset: A Cultural History,
and director and chief curator, The Museum at the Fashion Institute
of Technology*
‘A timely book that takes a fascinating journey
through the business practices and politics of hair, and the
questionable relationship between hair dealers, middle-men and
the consumer.’
*Professor Caroline Cox, author of How to be Adored*
‘Written in conversational prose with historical
images, little-known facts, and an absorbing narrative woven
throughout, this is a lively read that explores the fashion,
industry, and history of hair, while untangling our own
often-complicated relationship with this natural accessory. In an
informative and often whimsical voice, Tarlo personalizes her
research with vignettes about her own fascination with hair. From
eccentric wig makers in China to hair hunters in India and
customers in Europe, Tarlo takes us on an eye-opening journey that
will make us wonder if our own hair doesn’t have a secret life of
its own.’
*Booklist*
‘In Entanglement Tarlo opens up a whole secret world of human hair,
its diverse social meanings across cultures and the robust trade of
it that has carried on for centuries across the world. She weaves
in historical details that address issues of religion, symbolism,
fashion and economy, and presents ethnographic encounters with a
range of characters from Dakkar to Wenzhou, Chennai to New York –
millionaire wig dealers, impoverished villagers sorting comb waste,
temple officials and fashionable women – who all perform an
important role in this ubiquitous but unseen trade. This book is
for everybody who is curious about how a single object can become a
sought after commodity around the globe. Entanglement is
beautifully written and while based on rigorous academic research
it eschews jargon and makes the fascinating story of hair the
centrepiece of the narrative. A most rewarding and edifying
read.’
*Mukulika Banerjee, anthropologist, London School of Economics and
Political Science*
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