Emma Dabiri FRSL (born 25 March) is an Irish writer and broadcaster. Her debut book, Don't Touch My Hair, was published in 2019. Her 2021 book, What White People Can Do Next: From Allyship to Coalition, became an international bestseller. She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2023.
Dabiri is a frequent contributor to print and online media, including The Guardian, Irish Times, Dublin Inquirer, Vice, and others. She has also published in academic journals. Dabiri's outspokenness on issues of race and racism has caused her to have to deal with extreme trolling and racist abuse online. She says of this that "it's just words" and the racism she grew up with fortified her to deal with it. She is the author of three books: Don't Touch My Hair (2019), What White People Can Do Next: From Allyship to Coalition (2021), and Disobedient Bodies: Reclaim Your Unruly Beauty (2023).
Dabiri holds a Western Marxist's critique of capitalism, and in What White People Can Do Next, she dedicates a chapter to "Interrogate Capitalism", building upon the ideas of Herbert Marcuse, Angela Davis, and Frantz Fanon. Western Marxism places greater emphasis on the study of the cultural trends of capitalist society. Dabiri summarizes: "In fact, in many ways race and capitalism are siblings", and while "capitalism exists, racism will continue".
Dabiri lives in London, where she is completing her PhD in visual sociology at Goldsmiths, University of London, while also teaching at SOAS and continuing her broadcast work. She is married and has two children.
Dabiri has appeared on the television programmes Have I Got News For You, Portrait Artist of the Year. and Question Time.
In the book, Dabiri explores the erasure, stigmatization and appropriation of Black hair. She uses a historical and cultural approach to investigate the global history of racism towards Black hair, while taking readers on her own personal journey of self-love and acceptance.
Additionally, Dabiri analyses such topics as the criminalization of dreadlocks and the natural hair movement.
The review by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff in The Guardian summed up Don't Touch My Hair by saying: "The first title of its kind, with fresh ideas and a vivid sense of purpose, Dabiri's book is groundbreaking."
The book was released in the US in 2020 under the title Twisted: The Tangled History of Black Hair Culture.
In a review of Disobedient Bodies, The Irish Times author Anna Carey writes: "This call to joyful disobedience is further proof that Dabiri is one of our most important and exciting thinkers and writers."
Dabiri released the book as an accompaniment to the exhibition titled The Cult of Beauty at the Wellcome Collection in autumn 2023.
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