Important Haircut: Difference between revisions

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* In the ''[[Babysitters Club]]'' series, Mary Anne has one when her father stops being overprotective of her.
* In ''[[The Little Mermaid]]'' (the original story) the mermaid's sisters give the sea witch their hair in exchange for a knife that will grant the mermaid her tail back.
* Inverted in ''[[Emma]]'', as the haircut is important only because all the other characters think it isn't. "Emma's very good opinion of Frank Churchill was a little shaken the following day, by hearing that he was gone off to London, merely to have his hair cut."
** Of course, it later turns out that the haircut wasn't his real reason for the trip.
* Happens to a few characters in the ''[[Sword of Truth]]'' series, where one section of the world puts a lot of stock in the length and style of women's hair. Two examples: In the first book, the hero gives Rachel (previously little more than a slave, with her hair deliberately chopped up) a haircut evening out her locks after she runs to freedom. In the second book, the Mother Confessor (who, as the de facto ruler of the land, has the longest hair around) has her hair chopped off before she's sentenced to be executed.
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* Also, in ''[[Narnia|The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe]]'', part of the tragedy of Aslan's sacrifice was seeing him with his mane cut off. Without it his majesty disappeared and he looked like simply a large cat.
** ...which would seem to [[Unfortunate Implications|suggest]] that a ''female'' lion wouldn't have had much majesty to begin with.
*** It's not a sexism thing. It is supposed to be like when an animal is skinned as a prize for the hunter. Him being sheared shows that the White Witch had overpowered him, which is why he seems more helpless.
* In ''[[Romance of the Three Kingdoms]]'', Cao Cao chops off his hair to impress his men after transgressing against a rule that had execution (by decapitation) as its punishment. Calling it an attack on the head, his men were doubly careful to avoid breaking the rules when they saw that the highest ranks were still subject to punishment.
** Subverted by Zhao Fang. When Cao Xiu questions Zhao's motives for defecting, Zhao threatened suicide. After being stopped from killing himself, he cut off his hair as a pledge. Zhao's defection was fake, though, and Cao Xiu would end up severely defeated in battle.
* In Louisa May Alcott's ''[[Little Women]]'', Jo March cuts her long, beautiful auburn reddish hair and sells it to a wig maker to raise money for her mother's trip to where their father is in a Union Army hospital. It was her one real beauty and a great personal sacrifice to help her family; her sister Meg catches her crying later that night and Jo is embarrassed as she explains it's for her hair (she would cut it again and again if she couñdcould, but her tears are her last sign of vanity).
* Subverted in ''[[Honor Harrington|In Enemy Hands]]''. Honor's brutal [[State Sec]] captors think giving her a clipper-cut is inflicting yet one more humiliation on a woman condemned to hang. Unfortunately for the 'black-legs', Honor deliberately wore her hair that short throughout most of her earlier career and only grew it out during her time in 'exile' on Grayson; she finds their resulting consternation a little funny, and is actually more worried that they're not feeding her enough.
* In [[Ben Elton]]'s novel ''Dead Famous'', Sally, a contestant on a ''[[Big Brother]]''-style game show, expresses a desire for an Important Haircut and cuts and dyes her hair while staying in the house. It turns out to be a ''very'' important haircut, because {{spoiler|the show's producer planned to murder one of the girls to boost ratings, and "pre-recorded" the scene for all five female contestants. Sally was the first target but was not killed because she no longer looked like the fake Sally on the videotape.}}
* In ''[[The English Patient]]'', Hana cuts her hair after she starts working as an army nurse.
* In the short story ''[[The Gift of the Magi]]'', Della has her long, beautiful hair cut and sold to get enough money to buy a Christmas present for her husband.
* F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote a short story called ''"[https://public.wsu.edu/~campbelld/engl494/bernicebobs.pdf Bernice Bobs Her Hair'']". Before the cut, Bernice explains:
{{quote|"I want to be a society vampire, you see," she announced coolly, and went on to inform him that bobbed hair was the necessary prelude.}}
* In the book ''Adorable Sunday,'' the title character Sunday [[Embarrassing First Name|poor kid]] cuts off her hair so her [[Stage Mom|mother]] will let her stop being a child model.
** Venus does something similar in ''Venus and the Comets.''
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* In ''A Farewell to Arms,'' Catherine mentions wanting to cut her hair off after her fiance died. She decides to cut her hair shorter later in the book for no particular reason, though This Troper's English teacher suggested that this, taken with the above, was [[Foreshadowing]] {{spoiler|her own [[Death by Childbirth]]}}.
* In Kij Johnson's ''Fudoki'', the main character, a Heian court lady, regards it as a liberation from oppressive ceremony when she's finally elderly enough to retire to a monastery. Even though her attendants initially only cut off a symbolic few inches of hair (because it's servants who wear theirs shoulder-length), she feels relieved by the lightening of weight as well as the meaning of the haircut, and intends to chop it all off once she leaves.
* In the short story that is a prequel to [[Mercedes Lackey]]'s [[Heralds of Valdemar|VowsAndHonorVows And Honor]] duology, Tarma's hair is cut off by her Goddess to show that she has been accepted as Swordsworn.
* In the ''[[Pern]]'' novel ''Nerilka's Story'', Nerilka shears off the long hair that was her one vanity before leaving her life as a Lord Holder's daughter to work as an anonymous healer's assistant in the plague tents.
* In ''[[A Rose for Emily]]'', Emily cuts her hair after her [[Overprotective Dad]] dies.