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Was It Something I Wore?: Dress, Identity, Materiality [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 384 pages, height x width: 231x168 mm, weight: 636 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Feb-2012
  • Izdevniecība: HSRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0796923620
  • ISBN-13: 9780796923622
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 54,65 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 384 pages, height x width: 231x168 mm, weight: 636 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Feb-2012
  • Izdevniecība: HSRC Press
  • ISBN-10: 0796923620
  • ISBN-13: 9780796923622
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
People often wear their causes on their t-shirts, in their choice of traditional attire or other garments, or by way of specific costumes, pieces of jewellery or particular accessories. In Was It Something I Wore? Dress; identity; materiality, the contributors explore the construction and performance of personal and social identities. The essays point to the significance of dress as material culture in social science research not only in their content but also in their focus on a variety of methodologies including memory work, visual studies, autoethnography, object biographies and other forms of textual analysis.

The framing question, Was it something I wore? is central to the many dress questions the book raises; questions that challenge the socio-political status quo. To what extent does dress visually signify the construction of a chosen identity and a chosen performance? How does dress position the body and identity in different social and cultural spaces? How does dress signify oppression and/or liberation for women and how might this differ for men? What is the role of dress in the constructions of schooling and contemporary childhood? In its exploration of these and other questions, Was it something I wore? addresses a variety of pertinent social issues that confront communities in southern Africa.
Tables and figures
vii
Acknowledgements ix
Acronyms and abbreviations x
DRESS, IDENTITY AND METHOD
1 Reconfiguring dress
3(16)
Claudia Mitchell
Relebohile Moletsane
Kathleen Pithouse
2 `White' women in `black' clothing: Overtures towards Africanness in dress in a South African context
19(22)
Julielle Leeb-du Toil
3 Stories fluttering in the wind: How clotheslines write our lives
41(16)
Hourig Attarian
4 Take a picture: Photographs, dress, gender and self-study
57(15)
Ann Smith
5 Aesthetics and identity in contemporary South African fashion
72(23)
Desiree Lewis
ACCESSORISING DEMOCRACY
6 Gender and the politics of the Basotho blanket
95(17)
Mathabo Khau
7 Ayashisa mateki: Converse All Stars and the making of African masculinities
112(20)
Kopano Ratele
8 Do clothes make a (wo)man? Exploring the role of dress in shaping South African domestic workers' identities
132(16)
Sithabile Ntombela
9 A loud silence: The history of funeral dress among the Ndau of Zimbabwe
148(14)
Marshall Tamuka Maposa
10 Dressing sex/wearing a condom: Exploring social constructions of sexuality through a social semiotic analysis of the condom
162(19)
Ran Tao
Claudia Mitchell
DRESSING TO LEARN/LEARNING TO DRESS
11 Who wears the trousers here? Women teachers and the politics of gender and the dress code in South African schools
181(15)
Pontso Moorosi
12 Was it something she wore? Gender-based violence and the policing of the place of girls in the school space
196(12)
Naydene de Lange
13 The gender politics of the school uniform
208(17)
Nolutho Diko
14 The perfect matric dance dress
225(17)
Linda van Laren
15 Angeke ngibe isitabane: The perceived relationship between dress and sexuality among young African men at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
242(17)
Thabo Msibi
16 Khangela amankengane: The role of dress amongst rural extension workers in KwaZulu-Natal
259(18)
Bongiwe Mkhize
DRESSING FOR SOCIAL CHANGE
17 Wearing our hearts on our sleeves: The T-shirt and the South African activist agenda
277(11)
Relebohile Moletsane
Peliwe Lolwana
18 The art of representation versus dressing to be invisible: Who am I dressing for in contemporary Rwanda?
288(16)
Eliane Ubalijoro
19 Rewriting the script: Drag, dress and the body politic
304(19)
Crawl Evans
Robert J. Balfour
20 Sari stories: Fragmentary images of `Indian woman'
323(18)
Nyna Amin
Devarakshanam (Betty) Govinden
21 Personal adornment and creative process as micro-resistance
341(13)
Marlene de Beer
Picture credits 354(2)
Contributors 356(2)
Index 358