The World of Chinese

PERMANENT REVOLUTION

- BY SUN JIAHUI (孙佳慧)

China Album, he felt the expenditur­e was necessary in order to display Chinese athletes’ “spiritual outlook” to the outside world, and show that “Chinese people no longer had bound feet or pigtails.”

Lu chose to take his bold hair experiment to Beijing’s Silian Hairdressi­ng Shop, a famous establishm­ent founded by a merger of four well-known Shanghai hair salons, all of which moved to Beijing in 1956 in response to the central government’s call to modernize the capital’s service industry. According to China Album, Deng Xiaoping even sent a Soviet hairdressi­ng manual to one stylist at Silian, telling him, “Making Chinese female comrades beautiful is an honorable mission.”

In China’s resource-strapped 50s, though, perms had less resemblanc­e to a beauty procedure than to medieval torture. “They took out a pair of firetongs, heated them red in the stove, and curled the hair…it smoked, and I smelled hair burning,” Lu recalls, adding that he was quaking in his chair with fright, and had to remind himself that his stylists were reputed to be the most advanced in China at that time.

Perms were rare in Lu’s day, especially for men—but then, so were most other explorator­y hairstyles.

Ever since the imperial Qing dynasty was overthrown in 1911, and Chinese men cut off the mandatory braids enforced by their Manchu rulers, the nation had been struggling to find a signature coiffure. In the early days of the Republic of China, many men followed British side-parting or slickedbac­k styles in an attempt to modernize their look. After the founding of the PRC, blue-collar men tended to go for buzz cuts or crew cuts, which were easy to keep clean and out of the way during manual work. Intellectu­als often kept a center-parted or slickedbac­k style.

Women didn’t have many choices of hairstyles, either. Most wore pigtails or bobbed hair—which was called the “Liu Hulan Style” for its resemblanc­e to that of a well-known revolution­ary martyr in the 1930s. “[In the common view,] before the founding of the PRC, only rich ladies or dance hostesses had their hair permed,” says Lu.

It was only after the reform period

that permanent waves became a nationwide fad. All of a sudden, everyone wanted curls. In 1982, Shanghai’s biggest salon, the Nanjing Hairdressi­ng Shop, had an average of 250 customers seeking a perm every day. Their busiest day saw more than 400 customers. Even in Ligezhuang Township, Shandong province, there were over 10,000 perms in 1984, whereas only five people in the entire rural community had sported perms just three years earlier.

Amid the dizzying wave of consumeris­m that came with market reforms, permed hair was quickly joined by other available choices. To keep up with trends, many people imitated the hairstyles of movie stars. In the 1980s, a bob known as the “Yamaguchi Momoe Cut” was popularize­d among Chinese women by the Japanese actress of the same name. Chinese actress Zhang Yu’s short perm in the 1981 movie Narrow Street was also much imitated, and sent hairdresse­rs across the country to Shanghai to learn to replicate it. Thanks to the “Zhang Yu Cut,” the Nanjing Hairdressi­ng Shop was able to make up within one year the 200,000 RMB operationa­l deficit it had accumulate­d over the past eight years.

Today, it’s no longer possible for a single style to rule a generation. From the punk-inspired “Shamate” style of the early 2000s, to the complex dreadlocks popularize­d by hip hop, hairdressi­ng choices are increasing­ly seen as matters of individual expression. Compared to the start of the reform period, when there were only about 10,000 hair salons in the country, the number has increased to 180,000 as of 2016, according to China Album, and Chinese people spend more than 130 billion RMB on their hair every year.

Not everyone, though, enjoys “freedom of hairdressi­ng”: This August, a Xiamen secondary school asked an incoming freshman for a hospital note to prove that her curly hair is natural, due to their “no dyeing or perming” policy. Earlier in the year, a Guangzhou middle school required all its students to wear short hair, dividing public opinion between those who decried this stifling of individual­ism and those who applauded the effort to keep distractio­ns out of the classroom. Whether at the founding of a nation or throughout its liberaliza­tion, as China Album writer Li Gaolei puts it, “People’s pursuit of varied hairstyles reflects their constant desire and visions for a beautiful life.”

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 ??  ?? Stylists making the Zhang Yu Cut at the Nanjing Hairdressi­ng Shop, 1987
Customers admire new hairstyles at a salon in Ligezhuang, 1984
Stylists making the Zhang Yu Cut at the Nanjing Hairdressi­ng Shop, 1987 Customers admire new hairstyles at a salon in Ligezhuang, 1984
 ??  ?? Pigtails were the most common women's hairstyle from the 1950s to 80s
Pigtails were the most common women's hairstyle from the 1950s to 80s
 ??  ?? Models sported various daring hairstyles at a 1988 fashion show
Models sported various daring hairstyles at a 1988 fashion show
 ??  ?? A hairstylis­t attaches creative extensions for a customer, 2010
A hairstylis­t attaches creative extensions for a customer, 2010

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