In order to explore London’s
everyday superdiversity and how it is reflected in the built landscape, over
the next few weeks I am going to try to photograph every women’s hair shop and
salon in the borough of Lewisham.
The urban landscape in which we live both shapes and is shaped by our everyday actions and, crucially, the bodies that carry out those actions. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the super-diverse city of London. In the city, where over 300 languages are spoken in schools, where some of the most deprived areas neighbour some of the wealthiest and where great swathes of former social housing is being regenerated and, in some cases, gentrified, this diversity is visible in the markets, the restaurants and cafés and the places of worship, in the clothes that we wear, in the newspapers we read and where we go to get our hair done.
Friday, 27 June 2014
An exploration of London's everyday superdiversity. Through hair.
The urban landscape in which we live both shapes and is
shaped by our everyday actions and, crucially, the bodies that carry out those
actions. Nowhere is this more apparent
than in the super-diverse city of London. In the city, where over 300 languages are
spoken in schools, where some of the most deprived areas neighbour some of the
wealthiest and where great swathes of former social housing is being
regenerated and, in some cases, gentrified, this diversity is visible in the markets,
the restaurants and cafés and the places of worship, in the clothes that we
wear, in the newspapers we read and where we go to get our hair done.
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