Interwoven Dependencies: Roundtable Discussion
Christian missionaries pressured women in colonial contact zones to dress more ‘appropriately’ according to European understandings of Christian modesty. At the same time, access to new material goods was one of the attractions to convert. New converts and missionaries actively negotiated the re-composition of local and European fashion styles and, related to this, new forms of body and gender norms and identities. The recomposed forms of dress evolved constantly, gradually acquiring the status of ‘traditional’ dress and becoming materialisations of cultural identity and belonging. Yet, against the backdrop of postcolonial critique and the latest decolonization movements worldwide, the perception of these on-going fashions is currently shifting and being questioned as part of colonial legacies. Given these historical processes, how can we rethink dress and fashion not only as cultural expressions but also as archives of lived experiences, contestations, and resistances?
Time
Thursday, 03.04.25 - 04:30 PM
- 06:30 PM
Event format
Conference
Topic
Interwoven Dependencies. Redressing Fashion and the Heritage of Mission
Target groups
Students
Researchers
All interested
Languages
English
Location
Global Heritage Lab, Poststraße 26, 53111 Bonn
Reservation
required
Additional Information
Organizer
Julia Binter, Maria Caley, Loini Iizyenda, Malika Kraamer, Gisela Muschiol, Karoline Noack
Contact
Links
- https://globalheritagelab.org/project/international-transdisciplinary-conference-interwoven-dependencie-redressing-fashion-and-the-heritage-of-mission/