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Title: American Anthropological Association Conference


1
American Anthropological Association Conference
  • Becoming Cosmetologists Language Socialization
    in an African American Beauty College
  • Lanita Jacobs-Huey
  • Anthropology and American Studies Ethnicity
  • University of Southern California
  • November 19, 2003

2
Why Study Hair?
  • Cultural Significance of Place
  • Beauty Salon/Kitchen as Quintessential Black
    Womens Space
  • Cultural Significance of Practice
  • Hair Care Practice as Cultural and Highly
    Gendered events
  • Practices and Places of Hair Care are, likewise,
    Important Sites of Language and Identity
    Socialization
  • Cultural Significance of Hair
  • Socio-Political Semiotics of Hair
  • Cultural Discourse(s) around both Hair and Hair
    Care

3
Cultural Sites of Black Hair Care
  • Home Hair Care (Oakland, CA)
  • Beauty Salons (Oakland, CA, Los Angeles, CA)
  • Regional International Hair Expos (Los Angeles,
    CA, Columbia, SC, Atlanta, GA, London, England)
  • Hair Educational Seminars (Los Angeles and
    Beverly Hills, CA, Charleston and Columbia, SC,
    Atlanta, GA, London, England)
  • Christian Cosmetology Association (Los Angeles,
    CA)
  • Electronic/Listserv Communities (Cyberspace)
  • Cosmetology School (Charleston, SC)
  •  200 Hours of Recorded Data

4
From the Kitchen to the Parlor Language
Becoming in Black Womens Hair Care
  • 6-year, multi-sited ethnographic study
  • Explored womens talk in beauty salons, hair
    seminars, cosmetology schools, bible study
    meetings, and, more recently, black standup
    comedy
  • Issues of representation often at heart of my
    observations and discoveries

5
The Cosmetology Institute Learning from Mistakes
  • Breaches (Garfinkel 1967) or breaks in frames
    (Goffman 1981) happen when clients or stylists
    act out of line or in other ways contest or
    subvert their respective role expectations as
    hair novices and hair experts
  • Clients can break implicit frames governing
    client-stylist negotiations by asking too many
    questions (Jacobs-Huey 1996a) or actively
    monitoring the progression of their hairstyle

6
Learning from Mistakes
  • Stylist, too, can disrupt implicit institutional
    scripts (Schank Abelson 1977) governing
    client-stylist negotiations
  • Publicly or indirectly criticizing colleagues
    work
  • Lexical breaches (saying curling iron versus
    curler) can mitigate the professional nature of
    cosmetological practice
  • Breaches often compel speakers to bracket or
    animate what went wrong or was supposed to happen
    in interaction (Schieffelin 1990)

7
Learning from Mistakes
  • Ethnographic discourse analys-es of breach
    episodes reveal
  • How clients, stylists, and students bracket
    specific linguistic exchanges
  • Implicit linguistic ideologies about the
    communicative roles that distinguish service
    providers from service recipients in hair care
  • Ideas about communicative stances deemed
    suitable for students and their clients during
    hair care
  • The voices (e.g., cultural, professional)
    employed by clients, students, stylists in the
    execution and/or resolution of a breach
  • Speakers mental states and intentions in the
    perpetration of a breach

8
Linguistic Breaches in the Field
  • Lanita Mrs. Collins do you plan on
    washing your hair today?
  • Mrs. Collins Do you mean shampoo? Because you
    wash dogs not hair.

9
Linguistic Breaches beyond the Field
  • The Essay Like Combing through My Kitchen with
    a Fine-Toothed Comb
  • The Ultimate Breach Calling My Mother Out of
    Her Name
  • The Reprimand I am not a hairdresser! I dont
    dress the hair. I cultivate the hair.

10
Insights from the Breach
  • Language a means of constructing expert identity
  • Professional talk as a means of socializing
    novices into proper discourse knowledge and roles

11
Reverberations across the Data
  • Language Socialization in Cosmetology School
  • Language Socialization in Advanced Hair Care
    Seminars
  • Contending with Vulnerability Exposing the
    Breach

12
Reverberations across the Data
  • Language Socialization in Cosmetology School
  • Language Socialization in Advanced Hair Care
    Seminars
  • Contending with Vulnerability Exposing the
    Breach

13
Becoming Cosmetologists
  • Learning the Science of Hair Learning the
    Professional Language of Cosmetology
  • Students learn to abandon Cultural/Kitchen
    Terminology for Scientific Terminology
  • Students learn the symbolic power of word choice
    and correction as a rhetorical display of ones
    expertise

14
Client-Stylist Negotiation at TCI
  • Client Hi, I want to get something for this
    bad hair day heh heh
  • Ms. Smith What do you want?
  • Client A perm
  • Ms. Smith A relaxer?
  • Client A relaxer
  • Ms. Smith Okay, that will be 20

15
Client-Stylist Negotiation at TCI
  • Client Hi, I want to get something for this bad
    hair day heh heh
  • Ms. Smith What do you want?
  • Client A perm
  • Ms. Smith A relaxer?
  • Client A relaxer
  • Ms. Smith Okay, that will be 20

Ms. Smiths rising intonation marks her reply as
a question an explicit repair
16
Client-Stylist Negotiation at TCI
  • Client Hi, I want to get something for this
    bad hair day heh heh
  • Ms. Smith What do you want?
  • Client A perm
  • Ms. Smith A relaxer?
  • Client A relaxer
  • Ms. Smith Okay, that
    will be 20

Ms. Smiths rising intonation marks her reply as
a question an explicit repair
Only when client provides right answer is her
request legitimized before all
17
The Work of Correction
  • Linguistic means of displaying expertise and
    socializing novices
  • Ms. Smiths correction establishes her expertise
    as a stylist/teacher
  • Ms. Smiths repair also socializes the client to
    respect her knowledge and use proper salon
    communication when making a hairstyle request
  • The clients subsequent visit proves this
    socialization to be a success
  • Breaches in preferred courses of discursive
    action can be actively or tacitly used to provoke
    repairs and, as such, act as mediators of
    language and cultural socialization (Mertz 1992)

18
Reverberations across the Data
  • Language Socialization in Cosmetology School
  • Language Socialization in Advanced Hair Care
    Seminars
  • Contending with Vulnerability Exposing the
    Breach

19
Language Socialization in Advanced Hair Care
Seminars
  • We are like Doctors Transcript 1

20
We are Like Doctors
  • Language as a Mediator of Professional Identity
  • Meta-pragmatic Ideology of Language
  • Language as a resource in the socialization of
    professional beings
  • Whats at stake?

21
Whats at Stake?
  • Clients as Potential Competitors Transcript 2

22
Clients as Potential Competitors
  • Dilemma Hairstylists skill and knowledge must
    be constructed and is oft-contested
  • Because clients are not dependent on stylists
    to the same degree as patients are on doctors,
    Khalif stresses the importance of obscuring
    clients lay knowledge and hair care skill
  • Stylists rely on the register of medical
    discourse and an ideological alignment with
    doctors to represent themselves as experts

23
Whats at Stake?
  • Clients as Potential Competitors
  • Cosmetologists expertise is subject to
    contestation, resistance, and ridicule

24
Whats at Stake? Social Face
  • Expositions on the Difficult Client
  • She client steady struggling to see. I turn
    her chair this way, she turning against me
    (Deirdre, TCI Student)
  • After Lynn (TCI student) completes a clients
    hair, the client picks up Lynns curling iron and
    proceeds to curl her hair. After the client
    leaves, another sympathetic client observes, You
    have to be patient, huh? Lynn responds, Yeah,
    I have to be in my profes-sion. The client
    adds, Yeah, I do too but that client tried to
    curl her hair with your curler! Lynn replies,
    Yeah, but I took it away from her.

25
Whats at Stake?
  • Clients as Potential Competitors
  • Cosmetologists expertise is subject to
    contestation, resistance, and ridicule

26
Whats at Stake?
  • Hairstylists? You know yall aint sh! right?
    Comedy Clip

27
Black Humor as a Marker of Local Knowledge
  • Black/urban standup comedy as a communal forum
  • Black comedy exposes in-group/cultural knowledge
    and secrets
  • Black comedy as counterhegemonic narrative
  • Black comedy speaks truth to power
  • Jokes about black stylists and black hair salons,
    as well as audiences laughter, reveal local
    knowledge

28
Reverberations across the Data
  • Language Socialization in Cosmetology School
  • Language Socialization in Advanced Hair Care
    Seminars
  • Contending with Vulnerability Exposing the
    Breach

29
Contending with Vulnerability
  • Cosmetology Students Vulnerable Subjects
  • Clients challenges can assaults on students
    professional face
  • Resolution of linguistic breaches further reveal
    what is at stake in language and
    representa-tion for student and licensed stylists

30
The Case of Multiple Breaches
  • Notes from the Field (See Handout, Pg. 3)

31
The Case of Multiple Breaches
  • Notes from the Field (See Handout, Pg. 3)
  • Clients distinction between cut and trim and
    reference to her 46 years of hair care service
    situate her as co-expert
  • Ms. Collins must empathize with the client, while
    preserving her own professional face - even as
    the client threatens to subvert it
  • High-stakes engagement before attentive audience
    of vulnerable and impressionable bystanders
    (e.g., clients and students)

32
The Case of Multiple Breaches
  • Notes from the Field (See Handout, Pg. 3)
  • Deirdre, an unratified partici-pant, signifies
    on the perceived inappropriateness of the
    clients verbal and nonverbal behavior Acting
    like she the stylist No she didnt!
  • The client recognizes herself to be the intended
    target and, in turn, exposes and critiques
    Deirdres interference
  • Mrs. Collins also attempts to silence Deirdre
  • Mrs. Collins failure to align with Deirdre is
    viewed by students as a stance of disloyalty

33
The Case of Multiple Breaches
  • What counts as a linguistic breach?
  • Who is responsible for the breach (i.e., client,
    student, teacher)?
  • These questions become the focus of a subsequent
    lesson on Salon Management (Transcripts 3-4)

34
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 3 (See Handout, Pg. 4)

35
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 3 (See Handout, Pg. 4)
  • Mrs. Collins comments seem apropos to the
    earlier exchange involving her, Deirdre, and the
    disgruntled client (lines 16-20)
  • Deirdre contests the relevance of the textbook
    script to interactions at the school she feels
    clients unfairly exploit student labor and treat
    them poorly (line 21)

36
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 4 (See Handout, Pg. 5-6)

37
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 4 (See Handout, Pg. 5-6)
  • Deirdre invokes the case of multiple breaches
    and again critiques the clients perceived breach
    of stylists professional face (lines 41-43)
  • Deirdre acknowledges her veiled critique of
    client (line 42)
  • Mrs. Collins explicitly problematizes Deirdres
    involvement (lines 44, 46)

38
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 4 (See Handout, Pg. 5-6)
  • In particular, Mrs. Collins suggests that a
    client-stylist negotiation is a personal affair
    and Deirdre breached this implicit contract
    (lines 55, 57, 60, 66, 72, 75)
  • Deirdre disavows her veiled critique of the
    client (lines 56, 58)
  • Deirdre problematizes clients expert stance
    (lines 71, 73-74)

39
Wheres the Breach?
  • Transcript 4 (See Handout, Pg. 5-6)
  • Deirdre perceives Mrs. Collins to be complicit in
    breaching implicit linguistic protocols governing
    stylists conduct by occasionally obliging
    clients hair care requests for a seasoned
    cosmetologist (lines 49, 67-69, 76-91)
  • While Deirdre and Mrs. Collins disagree on the
    exact nature and person(s) responsible for the
    breach, they broach a consensus on clients need
    to understand the fact that students are (still)
    learning (lines 93-95)

40
Final Remarks
  • Language is an important mediator of stylists
    professional identity
  • Lexical Choices
  • Linguistic Ideology
  • Language socialization is a principal means
    through which cosmetology students become
    cosmetologists and stylists affirm their
    membership in a shared (and ever vulnerable)
    community of practice
  • Correction is but one of many means of
    socializing novices to respect stylists
    authority and knowledge

41
Learning from the Breach
  • Breaches reveal the linguistic ideologies and
    strategies which comprise stylists face-work
    (Goffman 1967)
  • Students are socialized through and to
    professional identity and language use even in
    the violation and subsequent reconstitution of
    communal and institutional meta-scripts.
  • The professional and cultural discourse
    strategies student and licensed stylists employ
    to mitigate threats to their individual and
    collective social face reveal implicit linguistic
    contracts governing their service-related
    encounters.

42
Learning from the Breach
  • Whether enacted by clients or stylists,
    unwittingly or intentionally breaches are prime
    occasions in which to investigate TCI students
    acquisition and use of professional literacies

43
References
  • Garfinkel, Harold. 1967. Studies in
    Ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
    Prentice-Hill, Inc.
  • Goffman, Erving. 1981. Forms of Talk.
    Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Goffman, Erving. 1959. The Presentation of Self
    in Everyday Life. New York Doubleday
  • Jacobs-Huey, Lanita. 1996a. Negotiating Price
    in an African American Beauty Salon. Issues in
    Applied Linguistics, (June) Vol. 7, No. 1 45-59.
  • Jacobs-Huey, Lanita. 1996b. Negotiating Social
    Identity in an African American Beauty Salon.
    Forthcoming in the Proceedings of the Berkeley
    Women and Language Group Conference (April)
    Berkeley, CA.
  • Mertz, Elizabeth. 1992. Linguistic ideology and
    praxis in U.S. law school classrooms.
    Pragmatics, Vol.2., No. 3 325-334.
    (September).
  • Schank, Roger and Robert Abelson. 1977.
    Scripts, Plans and Knowledge. In P.
    Johnson-Laird and P. Wason (Eds.) Thinking
    Readings in Cognitive Science. Cambridge
    Cambridge University Press.
  • Schieffelin, Bambi. 1986. Teasing and Shaming
    in Kaluli Childrens Interactions. In B.B.
    Schieffelin and E. Ochs (Eds.) Language
    Socialization Across Cultures (165-181).
    Cambridge University Press.
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