This is not a grass skirt : on fibre skirts (liku) and female tattooing (veiqia) in nineteenth century Fiji

Author(s)

    • Jacobs, Karen

Bibliographic Information

This is not a grass skirt : on fibre skirts (liku) and female tattooing (veiqia) in nineteenth century Fiji

Karen Jacobs

Sidestone Press, c2019

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-202) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Pacific 'grass skirt' has provoked debates about the demeaning and sexualised depiction of Pacific bodies. While these stereotypical portrayals associated with 'nakedness' are challenged in this book, the complex uses and meanings of the garments themselves are examined, including their link to other body adornments and modifications. In nineteenth-century Fiji, beautiful fibre skirts (liku) in a great variety of shapes and colours were lifetime companions for women. First fitted around puberty when she received her veiqia (tattooing), women's successive liku were adapted at marriage and during maternity, performing a multiplicity of social functions. This book is based on a systematic investigation of previously understudied liku in museums collections around the world. Through the prism of one garment, multiple ways of looking at dress are considered, including their classification in museums and archives. Also highlighted are associated tattooing (veiqia) practices, perceptions of modesty, the intricacies of intercultural encounters and the significance of collections and cultural heritage today. The book is intended for those interested in often neglected women's objects and practices in the Pacific, in dress and adornment more generally and in the use of museum collections and archives. It is richly illustrated with rare and previously unpublished paintings and drawings, as well many examples of liku themselves.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Note on Fijian Orthography Glossary 1. Fibre Skirts, Tattooing and the Museum 2. Liku, Veiqia and the Adorned Body 3. Collecting Liku and Veiqia Difference: liku, veiqia and early visitors Domesticity: clothing transformations Curiosity: colonial bodies 4. Classifying Liku and Veiqia Liku: lost in translation Veiqia as museum objects 5. On Separations and Connections List of Illustrations and Credit Lines Bibliography Index

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