I Am More Than My Hair: My Outward Appearance Does Not Define Me, is a two-part project, documentary film and coffee table book. The newly published book features 138 portraits of 46 women and the stories of their experience with hair loss, as well as women who cut their hair in solidarity of a loved one.
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
NBtM Tour + #Giveaway: I Am More Than My Hair by Alyscia Cunningham @alyscia_c @GoddessFish
I Am More Than My Hair
by
Alyscia Cunningham
GENRE: Women's
Issues; Photography
BLURB:
From the time we are young, girls are pressured into a set
belief of beauty standards. Hair is certainly high on the list and is often
labeled as our "crown and glory." Where does this notion fit for a
girl with alopecia (the partial or complete absence of hair from areas of the
body where it normally grows; baldness)? This new coffee table book should
bring light to the issue.
I Am More Than My Hair: My Outward Appearance Does Not Define Me, is a two-part project, documentary film and coffee table book. The newly published book features 138 portraits of 46 women and the stories of their experience with hair loss, as well as women who cut their hair in solidarity of a loved one.
I Am More Than My Hair: My Outward Appearance Does Not Define Me, is a two-part project, documentary film and coffee table book. The newly published book features 138 portraits of 46 women and the stories of their experience with hair loss, as well as women who cut their hair in solidarity of a loved one.
Excerpt:
Debbie, 31
Pull-Quote:
My
friends and family supported me
Story:
On May 24, 2011, I
discovered a large mass in my left breast while I was doing my self-check.
Later that day, I went to the National Cancer Prevention Institute in Lagos for
a breast screening. A nurse screened both my breasts and my cervix and referred
me for sonography, which was done at a local scanning center. On June 3, 2011,
I had a Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology
procedure at Me Cure Health Care Limited to diagnose my
condition. I was told that the breast lump was benign and that the left
auxiliary lymph node was negative for malignant cells. On June 11, 2011,
I had my first lumpectomy at a local medical center.
Barely four months
later, I discovered another lump slightly above the previous operation site and
had surgery at the same hospital. But this time, I insisted on further medical
investigation to know why the cancer recurred. That’s when I was diagnosed with
invasive ductal carcinoma. By April 2012, I was diagnosed with Stage IV carcinoma.
I had withheld the news
from my dad because he was hospitalized for paralysis, but with the latest
diagnosis, I couldn’t hold the news any longer. I told my dad about it on July
31, 2012 hoping he had gained enough strength to handle the news but, unfortunately
for me, he passed on to glory the following day, which was my birthday, August
1, 2012.
My friends and family
supported me and, before I knew what was happening, all my friends joined a
campaign for me on Twitter tagged “walk against cancer, #savedebbie.” I got the
exact amount of money I needed for my treatment in the United States ($55,000),
but I had to start chemotherapy right away in Nigeria.
I arrived in the United
States in October 2012 and started treatment at Howard University Hospital. I
had chemotherapy for 10 months followed by a bilateral mastectomy in October
2013. To the glory of God, I survived Stage IV breast cancer, but I am still
fighting bone and liver cancer.
Rest in peace, Debbie:
August 1, 1984 – April 1, 2016.
Interview with Author
Alyscia Cunningham
Can you tell us a little bit about your next books or what you
have planned for the future?
I'm
working on the documentary film for I Am More Than My
Hair. The soon to be released documentary features interviews of
females, their experience with alopecia
(hair
loss) and the connection of their emotions to the media's standards of
beauty.
I
also have another photography book as well as a children's book idea in the
works but
decided
to hold off on sharing until the details are finalized.
How long would you say it takes you to write a book?
I've
published 2 photography books so far and it took me an average of 3 years each
to
complete.
What is your favorite childhood book?
To be honest, I wasn't a big reader as a kid. Although I enjoyed biographies, I
read because I had to not because I enjoyed it. Sometime during my 10th grade
year I read the novel
Fly Girl, and fel in love with reading stories.
What made you want to become a writer?
Since I was a young child I real y enjoyed creating stories and expressing myself
through journaling. I always knew I would be an author but also felt
authorship wouldn't be the only path in my career.
How long have you been writing?
My
love for writing started at the age of 10 years old.
How did you become involved with the subject or theme of your
book?
The
idea came to me after receiving a numerous amount of criticism for cutting off
my hair. I heard sayings like “a woman's hair is her crown and glory” and
“your hair is your beauty”. I was honestly fed up of the judgement about why a
woman should have long
hair. Or hair period. To prove my point that
a woman should not be defined by her hair, I came up with the idea for “I Am
More Than My Hair: My Outward Appearance Does Not
Define”.
For those interested in exploring the subject or theme of your
book, where should they start?
Visit my website and read more on my “Books/Film” tab - www.Alyscia.com
Just for fun
(a Favorite song: Wow, I have so many. If I have to pick only one I
would say - Sam Cooke, A Change Is Gonna Come.
(b Favorite book: The Coldest Winter Ever
(c Favorite movie: The Negotiator
(d Favorite tv show: The Cosby's
(e Favorite Food: Roti and curry shrimp
(f Favorite drink: Guinness (alcoholic); spinach, kale, mango and
pineapple shake (non-alcoholic)
Thanks so much for visiting with us today!
AUTHOR
Bio and Links:
Alyscia
Cunningham is an entrepreneur, author, filmmaker and photographer who has
contributed to the Smithsonian, National Geographic, Discovery Channel and AOL.
In September 2013 Alyscia self-published Feminine Transitions, a photography
book encompassed with portraits of raw feminine beauty. Her recently published
photography book and upcoming documentary film, I Am More Than My Hair,
features 138 portraits of 46 females and the stories of their experience with
hair loss as well as females who cut their hair in solidarity of a loved one.
Alyscia creates these, and future projects, with the consideration of art for
social-change.
Alyscia specializes in promoting our natural
beauty because she believes the media does a good job of focusing on our
insecurities by bombarding us with ads proclaiming that their appearance
without enhancements is inadequate or faulty. Her portraits are unaltered by
Photoshop and reveal women as they are naturally, without the façade they put
on for others.
Her work has been featured on Fox5 News, The
Huffington Post, Cosmopolitan, The Washington Post, APlus, and Proud2BMe. To
learn more about Alyscia and her work, visit Alyscia.com.
Alyscia also invites you to view her video
introductions to Feminine Transitions, and I Am More Than My Hair.
I Am
More Than My Hair book is now available on Amazon
and at these retailers:
Bluestockings Bookstore (New York, NY)
BookWoman
(Austin, TX)
East City Bookshop (Washington, DC)
Politics
and Prose (Washington, DC)
Sandy Spring Museum (Ashton, MD)
Vroman's
Bookstores (Pasadena, CA)
Women's Museum of California (San Diego, CA)
Social
media pages:
Twitter
- @alyscia_c
Instagram
- @Alyscia Cunningham
Facebook
- @Alyscia Cunningham Images
and @I Am More Than My Hair.
Giveaway:
A limited edition 2019 calendar for "I Am More Than My Hair" (US only) GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.
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2 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
Thanks for hosting!
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