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Mohawk hairstyle

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The famous Mohawk leader Joseph Brant wearing a scalp lock.
Mohawk haircut, Los Angeles, 1951

The Mohawk (or mohican in the United Kingdom) is a hairstyle which consists of shaving both sides of the head, leaving a strip of noticeably longer hair. Mohawks became common in punk subculture and Rivethead subculture in the early 1980s and were then adopted by various other groups, becoming more diverse in style. Today, Mohawks are still associated with the Punk subculture, but have also become a part of mainstream fashion.

History

The Clonycavan Man, a 2000-year-old male bog body found near Dublin, Ireland, was found to be wearing a Mohawk, held together with plant oil and pine resin imported from southwestern France or Spain.[1] The Mohawk, which can also be known as "Moonhawk" in some countries, is often thought to have been worn by the Mahican and Mohawk tribes, but the name may be a misnomer; it is believed that the Wyandot were the first Native American tribe to wear the hairstyle, but early French explorers mistook them for the Mohawk tribe[citation needed]. Many other accounts of Native American cultures however claim that 'In times of war, Mohawk men shaved their heads except for a scalplock or a crest down the center of their head--the hairstyle known as a roach or a "Mohawk." [2] During World War II, members of the Allied Airborne soldiers (specifically the 101st Airborne Division - the "Screaming Eagles") shaved their hair into Mohawks.[3]

The classic fanned Mohawk.

In more recent times, both sides of the head are shaven or buzzed, and the remaining hair is long and often spiked in the middle. The hairstyle is generally known as a "Mohawk" in the United States and a "Mohican" or "Mowie" in the United Kingdom. In Punk fashion, the Mohawk is often dyed brilliant colors and the center strip of hair worn so that it points straight up, often to impressive height. The adaptation of the Mohawk by anarchist leaning punk rockers symbolically designated their involvement in a war against authority, most often being the government or capitalism. The Mohawk also appears in the Goth subculture, a close relative of punk, with the hair spiked or long. It is then commonly cut or decorated further.

Poet Roger Bonair-Agard wearing a mohawk in 2007.

Besides as part of punk fashion, the Mohawk became known with the popularity of Mr. T, the actor who first became famous playing the boxer Clubber Lang in the movie Rocky III and later as Sgt. B.A. Baracus in the television series The A-Team.

Another well-known popular culture depiction of the Mohawk came from Martin Scorsese's 1977 film Taxi Driver. Inspired by Robert De Niro in Taxi Driver, Richie Stotts of the New York punk band The Plasmatics got a Mohawk haircut in January 1979, followed by Jean Beauvoir and Wendy O. Williams in 1980. The Plasmatics appeared on the American comedy TV show Fridays on January 16, 1981, which introduced the Mohawk to U.S. pop culture, while the band's albums and tours popularized the hairstyle in the UK and Europe.[4] In 2005, the Mohawk seemed to receive a brief and small revival among the mainstream, as claimed in Eric Wilson's Sep 1, 2005 article in The New York Times, "The Mohawk Becomes, Well, Cute." In the article, Wilson argued that part of the revival was caused by Angelina Jolie's adopted son, Maddox Jolie.

A modified version of this hairstyle, the fauxhawk, became somewhat popular in the 2000s.

Maintenance

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The Mohawk is, by its nature (and depending on the type of hair the wearer has), typically a high-maintenance style. After practice, maintenance of the style can become quite routine for the wearer and done in a much shorter amount of time. Depending on the specific look desired by the wearer, regular, careful shaving may be required to maintain a clean line between the shaven and long parts of the hair; this can be especially complicated in bi- and tri- hawks.

If the hair is to be worn up, 30 minutes or more of laborious styling, including brushing, backcombing (teasing), twisting and so on, may be required. Some styles are particularly difficult to put up, requiring the use of sprays, and in some cases other holding agents like, white or clear glue, egg whites, cornstarch, or gelatin. The amount of time required for styling may increase considerably with longer hair or styles that require even spikes and lines. Depending on the method used to spike a Mohawk, it can take much less than 20 minutes. The use of glue and a blow-dryer cuts down considerably on the time needed. The best way to do it and keep it clean would be to apply strong hair spray to dry hair from the bottom and work your way up to the top while blow drying. The easiest way to maintain longer mohawks is to put it into liberty spikes; this is much faster and holds much longer.

However, once the Mohawk is up it can be easily maintained for an extended period. By sleeping on the side of the head with the Mohawk extending in the air, daily maintenance takes only a few minutes of reinforcement touching up. Depending on what is used to put the Mohawk up, and the conditions it endures, a Mohawk can stay erect for several weeks. Some wearers enhance the look of their Mohawks using hair dyes. This, too can require a great deal of initial effort and maintenance, especially in styles where the color(s) form an integral part of the style. In some cases, for example, Mohawk-wearers who normally wear their hair up in a fan style dye the hair in even lines or stripes of color, either horizontal or vertical.

Reverse Mohawk

Reverse Mohawks are Mohawk haircuts in reverse (the opposite of a Mohawk), essentially a shaven straight line (usually wide enough for a disposable razor or electric hair clippers) from the forehead to the nape of the neck leaving hair on either side of the line. This haircut is also known as the Nohawk, Antihawk, HawkMo, Highway, Catwoman (after Soo Catwoman), and Skunk.

Other Mohawks

A Tophawk or Halfhawk is a Mohawk with the back shaved off. Reverse Mohawk (Re-Mo/Hawkmo) video

  • BiHawk- having two mohawks (also known as 'twin-fins')
  • Duohawk- When a mohawk is split into two parts.
  • Deathhawk - A teased hair mohawk. commonly seen in the deathrock/gothic subcultures.
  • Fauxhawk - A fake mohawk. Normal hair put up in mohawk style, or one that is less than 2 inches in length.
  • Mocombover - A mohawk specifically used to cover the bald sides of the shaven head by combing the long hair over the sides as in a comb over.
  • Libertyhawk - Having a spiked mohawk. A combination between liberty spikes and a mohawk.
  • Trihawk - Having three mohawks.
  • Roman(Sunhawk) - A mohawk where, rather than front to back, the hair extends over the head from one ear to the other.
  • 360 Mohawk - Having a mohawk that expands into a fringe. The fringe is grown to about nose length (or longer), and is spiked up to form a mohawk that expands from the back of the head, to the front of a person's face.
  • Garbohawk - An un-fanned hawk most commonly seen on women, which is cut short on the sides instead of shaved, and the hawk itself hangs down the side of the face, a' la Greta Garbo. Rozz Williams was known to have a garbo hawk, with blonde hair on both sides and chest length long black hair down the middle.
  • Halfhawk - A mohawk that is only on the top of the wearer's head, instead of going over the entire head like a traditional mohawk, hence the term "half" hawk. Usually fanned, but other styles can be done with it as well.

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Ireland Bog Bodies". Yahoo! News. Retrieved January 2006. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ Facts for Kids: Mohawk Indians (Mohawks)
  3. ^ Answers From The Colonel - Issue #1
    Image.
  4. ^ Dauphin, Edouard and Butch Star (1982). Plasmatics: Your Heart in Your Mouth! (The First Four Years). New York: Raging Rhino Entertainment. 14, 64.

See also

External links