W27 Fall 2021 - The Welcome Back issue

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Fall 2021

W27

Issue 01

Imagination Wove This Flesh Garment: An Exploration on Fashion and Its Complacency in the Gender Binary By Van Anh (Moon) Dang (International Trade & Marketing ‘23) Fashion (noun), defined as “the prevailing style (as in dress) during a particular time” by Merriam-Webster Dictionary, indicates the specific sartorial choices that are well-liked and accepted by a dominant group of people. Fashion (verb), defined as “to give shape or form to : to make, construct, or create (something) usually with careful attention or by the use of imagination and ingenuity,” illustrates the manner in which a structure is created through the action of sculpting and draping the body with garments. This action being done usually references the dependent relationship it has to the person performing the action – that is, the garments’ wearer.

gender is performative – meaning that the performance of gender is what makes gender exist.

Fashion can be seen as a visual and tangible way for individuals to explore identity and self expression, since the wearer has full control over what they can place on their canvas. Therefore, what one chooses to display on one’s body directly reflects the relationship one has to oneself. However, we should question whether we truly have the full autonomy we may think we do when the act of fashioning oneself is being executed.

The division of people into the binary of male vs. female creates a power dynamic by declaring one group powerful and the other powerless; it is a system ushered in by colonialism to exercise mass control. By exploring precolonial communities, we open our eyes to a pre-existing world filled with expansive gender identities that do not exist in a fixed binary structure. Such examples being India’s hijra, a community of intersex, asexual and transgender people, whose existence has long been revered in South Asia. Dating back as early as 1950s to the indigenous Zapotec cultures of Oaxaca, Mexico, there are muxe, people who are assigned male at birth that dress and behave in ways associated with being female. Another indigineous community known as the Ojibwa people, who lived in what is now considered Manitoba, Canada and North Dakota, U.S., also celebrate the idea of gender fluidity. These gender variant people are called two-spirit, translated from the Ojibwa’s words niizh manidoowag, representing people that carry both masculine and feminine spirits within them. It’s crucial to point out, however, that the term twospirit has been met with criticism from indigenous peoples, as it still implies a binary and does not fully encapsulate their beliefs of sexual and gender variance. However, the European colonial powers brought upon the violent erasure of indigenous peoples, cultures, values and belief systems through Christian beliefs about gender. Christian missionaries at the time acted as the religious accomplices to the Europeans’ imperialist agenda. Subsequently, the cultural norm of the gender binary was forcibly implemented worldwide.

Gender identity is constructed through a continuous number of acts that create “the appearance of substance” that the audience and performers come to believe as truth. As gender identity is defined as the stylized repetition of acts through time, not a seemingly seamless identity, Butler argues “the possibilities of gender transformation are to be found in the arbitrary relation between such acts, in the possibility of a different sort of repeating, in the breaking or subversive repetition of that style.”

What are the factors that come to mind when constructing an outfit: where you are going? Who you’ll be seeing? How you want to be perceived? Fashion, as individualistic of an experience as it is, is a reflection of the self in relation to the world. A person’s garment choices not only paint a picture of their character, but are also indicative of how they have been socialized to think and act. Through an aggregate of individuals interacting with one another in a collective space, a culture manifests itself. With a culture comes sets of norms, values and beliefs. To not live in defiance of Illustration by Delaney Siegler these rules, individuals tend to submit to an accepted way of behaving. More specifically, the concepts of “womanhood” and “manhood” are prime examples of the cultural norms that our society has designed and implemented. These concepts of “womanhood” and “manhood” greatly impact the sartorial choices that we make on a daily basis. What is “womanhood” and what is “manhood?” What defines being a “woman” versus being a “man?”

As an industry with roots in Western imperialism, colonialism and white supremacy, fashion has acted as a convenient tool for the widespread exploitation of marginalized identities that do not fit within the cisgender heteronormative society. Fashion, as liberating as one may assume it to be, is one of the main contributors in the creation and

These are nothing but arbitrary concepts defined by a consistent set of behaviors and the patterns associated with them. Gender is a socially constructed understanding that we as a collective agree to adhere to. To understand gender as a performance, it is crucial to bring up the work of philosopher and gender theorist Judith Butler. She argues that

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