Home Fashion The sudden hysteria behind Navajo, minorities inspired clothing and accessories.

The sudden hysteria behind Navajo, minorities inspired clothing and accessories.

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designer when she made swimwear featuring the Hindu sun god as the over riding image. Which raises the idea is fashion or any form of expression only useful and tasteful as long as it is created within certain parameters (ie not denigrating religious, gender or racist themes)? But then again, isn’t that what sometimes makes for great art (except when it comes to hanging cow dung on the wall, that will get you a cut in public funding) by challenging certain notions? Or is fashion not suppose to cross that line and says who? Or even beyond  fashion, is any act of expression only permissible as long as it satisfies some litmus test. But what litmus test and who has the right to say what’s offensive or not? What may be cool in downtown Brooklyn,NYC may be heresy in downtown Zimbabwe.

But then again, besides accommodating for two arms, two legs (and not even that sometimes…) why should we place any parameters on fashion in the first place? We are after all free to express ourselves (assuming we accept responsibility for our thoughts) and the market by the same token is free to reject our thoughts. So why the hysteria? You don’t like don’t buy. If you do, please help yourself.

As I have reiterated I have never bought navajo inspired fashion nor do I intend to, it simply doesn’t appeal to me and part of me does wonder if it takes the piss out of these people at their expense. But that’s just me, what’s the expression: ‘If you’re going to drink, drink responsibly.’ Or how about this? : ‘If you’re going to shop fashion, shop responsibly.’ So if you want to buy some navajo inspired clothes,enjoy and if you don’t that’s all right too, designers aren’t stupid- they’ll eventually work out that the market just isn’t interested….or will they?

When Lisa Burke sent a one-piece printed with an image of Hindu goddess Lakshmi down the Lisa Blue Swimwear runway at Rosemount Australian Fashion Week, the designer was met with fierce condemnation by the Hindu community.
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8 COMMENTS

  1. I hate that and and all Native American prints are referred to as “Navajo”. There are countless tribes, and I’d imagine each has their own style of embroidery and weaving (which is what their prints generally consist of, as opposed to chemically enhanced stamped textiles). It seems not many producers of said prints bother to do any research at all-which is sad, really, as these cultures can offer a plethora of inspiration.

  2. Navajo people and the Navajo (Dine) tribe are upset for many reasons.  First of all are the religious implications that somehow the tribe approves of feathers in the hair for fashion (they are only worn for ceremonies and when a medicine man places it their), The religion is very intertwined with culture and many acts are consided to be disharmonius and will affect the natural order of the   universe.This includes outsiders If cruciifix inspired underwear became popular and it was labeled Roman Catholic, there would also be an uproar.  Or what if I took your name and designed some fashion item the became synonmous with your name and you happened to hate it and had no say in the matter, how would you feel?
    Secondly is the perpetuation of misinformation about Navajo culture and design.  You can put anything out there and label as Navajo and all you are doing is lying to the public. Thirdly, Navajo goods have a reputation of being high quality hand made items. The Navajo wedding basket design is now made of cheap materials in the middle east and sold as Navajo goods.  Mexican rugmakers have been imitating Navajo rugs for years with poor quality rough weavings with bright analine dyes.  People who don’t know Navajo quality don’t know the difference.  Without the name protection the Navajo quality will lose it’s meaning.  They use sterling in jewelry, real turquoise, their own wool, natural plant dyes in rugs and baskets, cottonwood root in their carvings and natural local clay in their pottery.  When you buy Navajo items they are hand made in America, not machine made in China.
    You might find it interesting to know that I only found this blog because I googled Navajo clothing.  We no longer live on the Rez and I was looking to buy my granddaughter a traditional Navajo dress – handmade in a hogan.  But so far, I have not found one.  Everything was either historical or copycat ugly stuff or even worse, Halloween costumes.
    To answer your question about rights of artists to do whatever, I can tell you that this world would exist in Hozho (a state of ultra harmoney among all people and all facets of nature) if people stopped focusing on their rights and instead focused of their responsibilities to fellow humans.  Profit is not the God we all worship.

  3. “This goes far beyond an issue of trademarks or truth in advertising. This is also an issue of representation, and an issue of power. I, personally, don’t care about a pair of socks called “Navajo,” but I do care about what they represent. They represent the appropriation of Native American cultures and lifeways, and the continued stereotyping of Indigenous Peoples. Most consumers look at that sock and can’t imagine that it holds any meaning beyond its $4.99 price tag. But I, and other Native people, look at that sock and see that the painful history that has allowed the vast majority of Americans to ignore our continued existence.”

    http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2011/10/whats-next-for-the-urban-outfitters-navajo-case/

  4. @ Lorraine. Have you ever been to the navajo rez? its their land and THEY trash it, not us “Whites” as you put it. They dump crap all over the land, miles upon miles of roads littered with beer cans and bottles, empty beer boxes and thats JUST on the main roads. Go off road and there is mounds of garbage; more beer bottles, cans, old TVs, stoves, refridgerators, diapers etc.

    I work ambulance on the rez and have for the last 15 years of my life; I see how they treat their elders, children, wives, pets and livestock. I go clean up the messes they create with their violence, I patch up and comfort the severely beaten wives and the brutally raped children and mothers, I go patch up the stab victims, the broken bones from the drunken brawls and the drunken car wrecks.

  5. Lorraine, I love it when someone is fed up with discrimination, racism, generalizations and bigotry, and then gets on here and spouts discrimination, racism, generalizations and bigotry to communicate their anger. You know what Lorraine, bigots are bigots, I don’t care which ethnicity of the month you hate and your hate is way over the line when it is ignited by something so stupid as white people wearing clothes that look like they came out of a souvenir shop. Do ya get it? You’re a bigot.

  6. Why is it that “White People” always want to use Native designs to get richer…don’t these “white people” come up with their own ideas/designs? Guess! nothing will ever change
    these “white people” always want, want and never seem to give a damn! as how they hurt the Native People in the U.S.A (remember our ancestor’s were here first! you came an invade our home land, all “white people” are good for is demolish what everything they come across, first our land; 2- our language, 3-our way of life 4-mess with our beliefs 5- now our designs)
    Please! have the guts to leave come up with your own ideas; better yet from your tradition, your beliefs, etc… I wonder if you have any tradtions, culture..

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