The Guardian (USA)

Hawaiian shirts are returning – but ‘people want to think twice’, says expert

- Priya Elan

The return of the Hawaiian shirt has been celebrated in the style press, as celebritie­s including Bill Murray, Rihanna and Sophie Turner have been seen to wear them.

But according to Zara Anishansli­n, a fellow at the Davis Center for Historical Studies at Princeton, people should think twice before wearing the garments.

“They are the fashion equivalent of a plantation wedding,” said Anishansli­n. “They could be seen as fashionabl­e embodiment­s of the history of American colonizati­on, imperialis­m and racism against Hawaii’s indigenous inhabitant­s. People might want to think twice about whether the look is worth the weight of its associativ­e past.”

Hawaiian shirts have also been coopted by the “Boogaloo” movement, white supremacis­ts who advocate war against the federal government.

Initially made from leftover cloth intended for kimonos, the shirts were popularise­d by American veterans of the second world war. Soon Japanese motifs were replaced by Hawaiian ones and a cultural touchstone was born.

About five years ago, Hawaiian shirts became part of the “dadcore” trend. Then the “Boogaloo” movement chose to combine them with camouflage trousers, body armour and weapons.

“It might not be an aesthetica­lly pleasing combinatio­n but it’s a smart one, in terms of picking out your fellow members of the group in the crowd,” Anishansli­n said.

Last year, Dr Reece Jones of the University of Hawaii wrote about how the brightly coloured shirts came to symbolise something much darker.

“I know this seems like a joke and easy to dismiss,” he wrote, “but that is part of [the Boogaloo Bois’] strategy, to lure in young men and downplay what they are talking about. It is deadly serious. These men are preparing for a civil war.”

Anishansli­n thinks the fashion industry needs to think about how such shirts have been co-opted.

“I do think fashion houses and individual designers and sellers should speak out about people like the Boogaloo Boys using fashion for politics that encourage violence or racism,” she said.

Anishansli­n also believes celebritie­s such as Cara Delevingne and Justin Bieber who have recently worn Hawaiian shirts have a chance to help to reclaim them.

“Why not design Hawaiian shirts that use anti-gun, anti-racist, pro-peace iconograph­y and slogans?” she said. “Why not, perhaps importantl­y, hire indigenous designers to create them?”

 ?? Photograph: NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images ?? Bill Murray during the Golden Globe awards on 28 February.
Photograph: NBC/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Images Bill Murray during the Golden Globe awards on 28 February.
 ?? Photograph: Rachpoot/Mega/GC Images ?? Rihanna in Los Angeles on 29 March.
Photograph: Rachpoot/Mega/GC Images Rihanna in Los Angeles on 29 March.

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