The Sunday Guardian

Fashion and aristocrac­y are often at odds with each other

- KASHMIRA GANDER

They wear backwa r d b a s e b a l l caps, have Instagram accounts and eat TV dinners off their laps (probably). The royal family is a thoroughly modern institutio­n, isn’t it? Well, not when it comes to kilts. A news report on Tuesday revealed that the makers of the Balmoral tartan — an Aberdeen- slate-grey fabric embellishe­d with black and red stitching that was designed by Prince Albert in 1853 — are still bound by a contract stating they can only supply it to members of The Firm (and the sovereign’s piper, obviously).

Such strictures have a distinct whiff of the olden-days about them. And if they are exclusive rather than prescripti­ve— as were many laws from history that dictated how people of different rank could dress — they do demonstrat­e that our clothing choices are still influenced by outside forces. And after millennia of dictating on anything from hair-coverings to the length of pointed shoes, in various guises the fashion police remain hard at work, according to Ruthann Robson, professor of law at City University in New York and author of Dressing Constituti­onally, as they try to “control how race, class, gender and nationalit­y are conveyed”.

The precedents are endless. Upper-class Grecian women were banned from wearing embroidere­d robes in the 7th century BC, lest they be mistaken for prostitute­s. Fast-forward to 1537 and Henry VIII was trying to weaken Irish identity by forbidding native clothing in conquered territorie­s, including the tunic-like léine, secured with a belt, as well as limiting the amount of material used to make shirts. “Restrictin­g or transformi­ng native dress has long been a strategic part of military and colonial violence,” says Jane Tynan, a lecturer in design history at Central St Martin’s Scool of Art in London.

But it’s not all about the power trip. Money talks, too. The Elizabetha­n law of 1571 stating that all men aged six and above who were not gentlemen should wear a cap was an attempt to boost the wool trade; and clothing materials were rationed during the Second World War to save supplies. But an (arguably misplaced) paternalis­m can also play a part. There have been laws restrictin­g magnificen­ce among the lower orders, says Robson, that were designed to prevent them from going bankrupt “in a bid to look posh”.

Nowadays, rules, regulation­s and customs about clothing are as widespread and politicall­y charged as ever. The arguments for preserving decency or national security, and creating social cohesion remain. And though Tudor sumptuary laws have been scrapped and social codes relaxed, clothing has lost none of its old symbolism. Why, otherwise, would some supermarke­ts have banned the wearing of pyjamas in supermarke­ts in recent years? Why else would some establishm­ents bar young men wearing baggy trousers with their underwear showing over the top? Why would perpetrato­rs of sexual assaults say that “she was asking for it”? Or Slut Walk activists parade the night streets in revealing clothing to question “rape culture”?

In the current political climate, though, nothing is quite as controvers­ial as the head- coverings worn by many Muslim women, which are subject to varying restrictio­ns or diktats across the European continent and Islamic nations. In the West, to cover all but one’s eyes is commonly seen as threatenin­g, alien and suspicious —hence the French ban on full veils in public, and the British ban in the witness box. Liberal feminists, on the other hand, may see the hjab and niqab as signs of the male-chauvinist oppression of women. But to many Muslims, such veiling is normal and a sign of the “modesty” that they believe their religion requires.

Whichever, according to Marianne Franklin, profes- sor of global media and politics at Goldsmiths (University of London), such legal or social pressure is a heavyhande­d attempt to promote integratio­n. “A woman wearing a hijab might be offended if you ask, ‘Why are you wearing that?’” she says. She equates the sensitivit­y about such clothing to the British ban on Scots wearing tartan in the 18th century: now we’re a happy democracy (sort of), the passion of the Crown against the kilt is spent; and, says Franklin, “Tartan has become acceptable because it’s not within the geopolitic­al polarisati­on of ‘Islam versus the West’, as people would like to put it”.

You can see what she’s driving at. To her, the banning or shunning of other cultures’ customs of dress simply creates divisions. In essence, they reflect the fears and prejudices of the viewer much more than any intent on the part of the wearer, and they jar with the tolerant values of liberal democracy.

“Banning particular items of clothing indicates something undesirabl­e,” says Franklin. (That’s one reason for why paramilita­ry and political uniforms are forbidden in the UK and the US for instance.) And such moves serve to politicise garments that are otherwise innocuous to the wearer. “A woman getting up in the morning and putting on a hijab is different from someone wearing a Ku Klux Klan hood,” she says. “Bans are deeply problemati­c from a rights point of view, if they punish everyday life.” If, however, they preserve us from a ghastly royal tartan, they may not be all bad. THE INDEPENDEN­T

Nowadays, rules, regulation­s and customs about clothing are as widespread and politicall­y charged as ever. The arguments for preserving decency or national security, and creating social cohesion remain.

 ??  ?? The royal family of England.
The royal family of England.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India