Rapunzel's Daughters: What Women's Hair Tells Us about Women's Lives

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Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005 - Social Science - 273 pages
Weitz examines - through interviews with dozens of girls and women across the country - what hair means today, to young girls and to women; how girls learn to consider it central to their identity; what part it plays in adolescent (and adult) struggles with identity and with romance; how it can create conflicts and opportunities in the workplace; and how women face the changes in their hair that illness and aging can bring."--Jacket.

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