Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Why Fashion Matters By: Khadija Hassan February 19, 2005


Why Fashion Matters
Khadija Hassan February 19, 2005
Tags: fashion , history , influence , society
As a journalist I confront a variety of reactions when I declare what is currently my calling. I am now fairly used to getting the more-than-occasional raised eye-brow of disdain accompanied by the question “what-is-a-young-lady-of-your-academic-background-doin
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g-writing-about-?” and “-is-ok-but-why-don’t-yo u-diversify-your-column?” Of course the fact that this, specifically, is a column doesn’t really get through to most of them. Usually, I just take the high road, shrug my shoulders and let the comments pass. After all, everyone is entitled to their own opinion. The problem however, is that to matter, opinions need to be informed. Anyone can heckle - the true critic is a rare commodity. has suffered its share of browbeating and scorn. The lament echoes around us all the time, “Why can’t we move away from toward bigger, more meaningful things?” But viewing only as a liability, fruitless obsession or vain indulgence is as shallow a look into its social ramifications, as itself is usually made out to be. Yet there is the ambivalence that goads even the harshest mocker into the fold and makes a willing viewer out of him/her. What keeps even the most derisive audience coming back for more is the very depth that they fail to see. One may not care much about the people involved in (as one may not care much about the people involved in politics or banking), but to dismiss it as a world that adds nothing to the real one is simply childish. To understand and what it truly implies for a culture I take a step back from my undertaking to catalogue history. This is my attempt to explain why is important, so that the voices, that sometimes emerge, to scorn all and belittle the publication that chooses to include it as a worthy subject despite its “inimitable wisdom”, granting it instead the “veneration usually reserved for Zeus” may finally find a more satisfactory answer than a curt “well, I got you reading my ‘techno-babble’ to the very end, didn’t I”. may be perceived in two ways: In the first case, may be viewed with positive and associations as both attractive and functional. In the second case, it may be attributed a negative value and find associations of trickery and triviality. The negative view, quite familiar to us, snubs deeming it as inferior, as silly, as creating false or misguided desires and as propagating bogus and foolish views. Relegating it a status of being purely cosmetic and largely unreal or synthetic, it effectively damns and strips it off any possibility of value-creation for society. Of course, there are an enormous number of bad eggs who have taken the reins of our industry, whose actions only cause to live up to such accusations. But the blame is incorrectly placed. The positive view, largely ignored, places with the creative arts. More meaningfully, it sees design as an instrument of cultural production as and clothing play an integral part in the world that we live in, both in the creation of value at the manufacturing stage and the addition of value at the end-use stage. As becomes an essential part of our everyday reality, unlike conventional forms that are not accessible to all, it gains special status. ’s role as useful is not its only claim to meaning. It also becomes important when we consider its role in the communication of political ideology within a country. and politics have always gone hand in hand. Ex-PM Zafarullah Jamali’s ban on the show for being un-Islamic is just one barefaced example of the fact. But even more basically if we consider the semantic origins of we discover just how profoundly the two are entwined. The very word “” is derived from the Latin “factio”, which gave birth to the politically sensed “faction”. The word “faction” applies to differences and conflicts among groups with further connotations of the possession and exercise of power by them. It also implies the emergence of radical groups who form their own sub-culture within a mainstream culture that they find unacceptable. The most visible signifier of their differences and/or their rebellion comes across in their clothing i.e. in . We know what ideology a man wearing a green turban over white shalwar kameez (the shalwar raised above the ankle) represents. So, we can gauge the temperament, aspirations and views of people by the way they choose to dress. In this way, communicates culture and beliefs and becomes the tool whereby people declare their differences.Going further than and politics, also becomes a signifier of class structures. Such is the nature of social class that the elite never mix well with the commoners. We live under hegemonic structures, whether we like to admit as much or not, and we use to not only preserve our differences but also to legitimize them. When the well-heeled order haute couture they order dresses that establish them as different. Wearing that expensive outfit becomes a statement that seals these differences once and for all. Thus, is used as a fence to keep away lesser by the elite. But it doesn’t stop there. The commoners use it as a bridge to become nearer to their social superiors. This explains the pathological rush towards designer labels, taking place today, and also leads to the branding of as meaningless. But the truth is that is an aspiration towards creating meaning. Such class struggle may seem frivolous and may seem to be the culprit. But is only a symptom that communicates the illness. The illness lies in society itself. According to Frieha Altaf, “ in is and always has been for the elite. It has two effects: a trickle-up effect, when street comes into the main-stream; and a trickle-down effect, when moves from the elite to the masses. Barring the eighties when Afghani kurtas, shalwars and jewelry became the rage, in has always been trickle-down”. Over the world, has not gone strictly one way or another. It has been used to convey anti-establishment feelings through looks such as punk and grunge while it has legitimized the establishment by classic and structured trends. Here, since things have been less satisfactory on the renegade front, with no real movement coming together using dress as its signifier, we have taken the easy way out and chosen to condemn . has a cultural profile that saves it from being trivial. Those who dislike differences of ideology and class are usually the ones that view negatively, call it shallow and hold it responsible for creating misguided desires. Those who come to accept that there is no easy utopia and that differences amongst people will remain, can see for what it truly is: an outlet for creativity, a tool of cultural production and the means by which cultural differences find peaceful voices.

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