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This article employs socio-cultural theories to analyse the psychosocial effects of Gazan women cutting their hair during the 2023–2024 Gazacide. The severe conditions in Gaza, exacerbated by a lack of sanitation and essential resources due to the ongoing blockade, have forced women into extreme precarity. This has led to the compulsory act of hair-cutting as a measure for disease prevention. The act of cutting hair, which disrupts a universally recognised symbol of beauty and health, highlights the broader socio-political crisis. The paper critiques Western feminism for its selective empathy, noting its neglect of Gazan women’s suffering while focusing on issues pertinent to Western contexts. By framing hair-cutting not as individual psychological distress but as a response to aggravated socio-political conditions, the article underscores how this act reflects the broader dehumanisation and suffering imposed by the ongoing genocide.
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Bilal Hamamra
An-Najah National University
Noor Alzaghal
An-Najah National University
Ayman Mleitat
An-Najah National University
Journal for Cultural Research
University of Milano-Bicocca
An-Najah National University
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Hamamra et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69821628e634e0f7f57fcf9e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14797585.2024.2434835
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