Interdisciplinary Lunchtime Seminar

“A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

2019-03-12 12:00:002019-03-12 13:00:00Asia/Hong_Kong“A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

Interdisciplinary Lunchtime Seminar
“A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

Dr. Jason Petrulis
(Lecturer, Department of History, The University of Hong Kong)

Date: March 12, 2019 (Tuesday)
Time: 12:00 – 13:00
Venue: Room 201, 2/F, May Hall, The University of Hong Kong
Enquiry: (852) 3917-5772, ihss@hku.hk

    2019-03-12 12:00:002019-03-12 13:00:00Asia/Hong_Kong“A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

    Interdisciplinary Lunchtime Seminar
    “A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

    Dr. Jason Petrulis
    (Lecturer, Department of History, The University of Hong Kong)

    Date: March 12, 2019 (Tuesday)
    Time: 12:00 – 13:00
    Venue: Room 201, 2/F, May Hall, The University of Hong Kong
    Enquiry: (852) 3917-5772, ihss@hku.hk

      Overview

      Title:

      “A Country of Hair”: A Global Story of Korean Wigs, Korean-American Entrepreneurs, African-American Hairstyles, and Cold War Industrialization

      Speaker:

      Dr. Jason Petrulis (Department of History, The University of Hong Kong)

      Date:

      March 12, 2019

      Time:

      12:00 nn – 1:00 pm

      Venue:

      Room 201, 2/F, May Hall, The University of Hong Kong (Map)

      Language:

      English

      Enquiry:

      (Tel) (852) 3917-5772
      (Email) ihss@hku.hk

      Abstract

      How did South Korea become a “country of hair” in the 1960s and 1970s – a country where wigs were the #2 export, powering industrialization? Where this unusual renewable resource was in such high demand that a young girl was murdered for her hair? This lunchtime talk will answer these questions by tracing the “life” of a marginal commodity, the human-hair wig, through its many transnational transformations: from the heads of rural South Koreans to the hands of female factoryworkers in Seoul to the shoulder bags of Korean-American peddlers to the heads of African-American women. By combing through this tangled history, we will see how empire, race, and gender shaped Asian industrialization and globalization during the Cold War; and discuss how to use interdisciplinary methods to write a global history.

      About the Speaker

      Jason Petrulis is a historian of the US in the global perspective. His research embeds Asia and the US in global context by following things, ideas, capital, and people as they moved across oceans and borders, and by limning the global networks that resulted.

      Poster