Dress and gender : making and meaning in cultural contexts

Bibliographic Information

Dress and gender : making and meaning in cultural contexts

edited by Ruth Barnes and Joanne B. Eicher

(Cross-cultural perspectives on women)

Berg : distributed exclusively in the US and Canada by St. Martin's Press, 1992

Available at  / 14 libraries

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Note

The essays in this volume were presented during a workshop titled "Dress and Gender : Making and Meaning" which was held in April 1989 in Oxford

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Dress is one of the most significant markers of gender identity, yet is only rarely explored in depth. This volume addresses the relationship between gender and dress, opening up fascinating aspects by covering a great variety of ethnographic areas reaching from Asia, Europe and Africa to North and South America. The time span is equally wide-ranging and offers present-day material as well as studies based on historical data.

Table of Contents

R. Barnes and J. Eicher, Introduction - J. Eicher and N.E. Roach-Higgins, Dress and Gender: Definition and Classification of Dress: Implications for Analysis of Gender Roles - R. Barnes, Women as Headhunters: The Making and Meaning of Textiles in a Southeast Asian Context - L. Lefferts, Cut and Sewn: The Textiles of Social Organisation in Thailand - D. Geirnaert, Purse-Proud: Of Betel and Areca Nut Bags in Laboya (West Sumba, Eastern Indonesia) - C. Pancake, Gender Boundaries in the Production of Guatamalan Textiles - S. Baizerman, The Jewish Kippa Sruga and the Social Construction of Gender in Israel - C. Cerny, Quilted Apparel and Gender Identity: An American Case Study - L. Sciama, Lace Making in Venetian Culture - P. Dransart, Pachamama: The Inka Earth Mother of the Long Sweeping Garment - S. Michelman and T. Erekosima, Kalabari Dress in Nigeria: visual Analysis and Gender Implications - L. Cort, Whose Sleeves? Gender, Class, and Meaning in Japanese Dress of the Seventeenth Century - J. Leslie, The Significance of Dress for the Orthodox Hindu Woman - O.P. Joshi, Continuity and Change in Hindu Women's Dress - H. Callaway, Dressing for Dinner in the Bush: Rituals of Self-Definition and British Imperial Authority - R. Bailey, Clothes Encounters of the Gynecological Kind: Medical Mandates and Maternity Modes USA, 1850-1990 - M. Young, Dress and Modes of Address: Structural Forms for Policewomen

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