Stop the Presses: Zac Efron Is Currently Sporting Dreadlocks

Stop the Presses: Zac Efron Is Currently Sporting Dreadlocks

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Thirty-year-old actor Zac Efron first entered the American pop imagination by playing inoffensively handsome roles in Disney’s High School Musical franchise and the film musical adaptation of John Waters’ Hairspray. He later evolved to playing hunkier roles in “naughty” comedic films like Neighbors and Baywatch. But now the heartthrob has stirred online debate by styling his hair into dreadlocks, a style commonly associated with black Jamaican Rastafarians. Some consider Zac Efron’s dreadlocks (or any white person in dreadlocks) as a form of cultural appropriation.

The history of dreadlocks

Even though people tend to consider dreadlocks as a hairstyle with distinctly black origins, history shows that Vikings, Germanic tribes, early Christians and dark-skinned people in India, Africa and Oceania have all sported the hairdo throughout history.

Neverthless, the hairstyle was widely reintroduced to America from the 1940s and beyond through the Rastafarian culture, a Jamaican variation of Christianity that highlights the oppression of African people in Western “Babylon.”

A picture of Zac Efron’s dreadlocks

In addition to days-long “groundings” where Rastafarian thinkers discuss political theology — with intermittent drum circles around the fire and smoking of ganja (cannabis, a “holy herb” thought to bring peace, love and enlightenment) — some Rastafaris wear their hair in dreadlocks to distinguish themselves from straight-haired Europeans or as a “mane” in reverence of Haile Selassie, the 20th century Ethiopian emperor who some Rastas regard as the divine “Conquering Lion of Judah.”

What is cultural appropriation?

People who think of Zac Efron’s dreadlocks as a form of cultural appropriation see him as participating in a power dynamic in which a dominant culture (rich white people) takes elements from a culture whose people who have been systematically oppressed.

RELATED | Zac Efron Is the Latest Celebrity to Seriously Up His Sexy Game by Growing a Beard

But whether you consider Zac Efron’s dreadlocks a form of cultural appropriation depends entirely on whether you see modern-day dreadlocks as a form of black protest against white conformity rather than a hairstyle that has cycled through different cultures throughout history.

Jamaican singer-songwriter Bob Marley is probably the most famous Rastafarian in American pop-culture, seen here in dreadlocks

As for Efron, he says that he put his hair in dreadlocks “just for fun.” It’s unclear whether he knows about the hairstyle’s history, and it’s unlikely he’ll face any serious social stigma like other black people with dreadlocks have.

But who knows? Perhaps Zac Efron’s dreadlocks will make people more aware of the hairstyle’s history and get more people discussing cultural appropriation and why it matters in the first place.

What do you think of Zac Efron’s dreadlocks?

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