Chapter 1
Rung 2
INTRODUCTION
group identity and tribal marking
Hair is introduced as the greaser's defining emblem, establishing it as the visible boundary between social tribes before any conflict unfolds.
we wear our hair long and dress in blue jeans and T-shirts, or leave our shirttails out and wear our hair long and dress in blue jeans
Chapter 2
Rung 2
ESCALATION
identity and social naming
Hair performs a revelation function, naming Cherry Valance by her hair colour and so encoding physical appearance as social label across the class divide.
My name's Sherri, but I'm called Cherry because of my hair. Cherry Valance.
Chapter 4
Rung 2
ESCALATION
disguise and threshold crossing
Hair functions as a threshold marker as Ponyboy recognises his greaser appearance through his long greased hair, prompting the decision to transform it for concealment.
I suddenly thought of my long hair, combed back, and the slouching stride I used from habit.
Chapter 5
Rung 3
ESCALATION
identity sacrifice and loss of pride
Hair undergoes forced transformation — cut and bleached — enacting the loss of the greaser's proudest tribal marker and crystallising the cost of survival as self-erasure.
Johnny flipped out the razor-edge of his switch, took hold of my hair, and started sawing on it.
Chapter 6
Rung 3
ESCALATION
grief, recognition, and brotherly bond
Hair performs a revelation of emotional truth as Sodapop's anguished response to Ponyboy's cut hair converts a physical change into visible proof of what has been lost and risked.
He pushed my hair back. "Oh, Ponyboy, your hair … your tuff, tuff hair …"
Chapter 9
Rung 3
CLIMAX
pride, violence, and futile tenderness
At peak crisis, hair is simultaneously a symbol of hollow hood-pride questioned by Ponyboy and the site of Dally's final tender act toward the dying Johnny, collapsing defiance and grief into one gesture.
is a reputation for being a hood, and greasy hair? I don't want to be a hood
Chapter 12
Rung 4
RESOLUTION
diminishment and defeated survival
Hair closes the arc in quiet inversion: no longer a proud emblem or a contested symbol but a neglected detail on a frightened, defeated boy, signalling that the identity it once announced has been irrevocably altered.
a quiet, defeated-looking sixteen-year-old whose hair needed cutting badly and who had black eyes with a frightened expression