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  • Arts & Culture
  • Issue 48

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The history of the bowl cut.
Words by George Upton. Photograph by Javarman.

The history of the bowl cut.
Words by George Upton. Photograph by Javarman.

In hindsight, it’s surprising that the bowl cut didn’t make a triumphant return during the pandemic. If there was ever a moment for the archetypal do-it-yourself trim—staple of time-poor parents the world over, reviled by the children who had to sport them—it was when we were prohibited from visiting the hairdresser. Even the mullet made a comeback.

Perhaps this is because, more than any other hairdo, the bowl cut associates the wearer with a particular set of characteristics: a foolishness and imbecility exemplified by Moe Howard of Three Stooges fame and renewed for a new generation by Jim Carrey in Dumb and Dumber. Then there’s the hairstyle’s more recent association with the far right, after the bowl cut of the perpetrator of a mass shooting in 2015 became a neo-Nazi meme. It has since been added

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This story is from Kinfolk Issue Forty-Eight

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