first off, a very interesting event entitled "Fashion Maketh Woman" is happening tomorrow as part of the Intelligence Squared Spring 2010 debate series. for any of my readers on the other side of the pond (aka Westminster), i highly recommend trying to make it out! for the rest of us, there's always the internet!
Featuring an acclaimed panel including Stephen Bayley, Susie Orbach, Grayson Perry and Grazia's Style Director Paula Reed amongst others, the speakers will debate the motion: “Fashion Maketh Woman.”
"Woman is born free, but everywhere is fashion’s slave. Her choices are an illusion: the fashion companies and magazines dictate her purchases to her. She feels compelled to own the latest must-have handbag, believes the key to happiness is the new bondage boot; they’ve told her she’s worth it and without her fashion fix she feels worthless. This, at least, is the story told by those who scoff at fashion. But isn’t that just sour drapes? Isn’t it rather the case that the world of fashion defines the spirit and mood of the age? That the brilliant designers in the fashion houses bring vim and vigour to an otherwise pedestrian world? And that those who somehow think they¹re above it all just end up looking drab and dull?"
The debate is being held on Thursday, 17th June from 18:45 - 20:30 at Methodist Central Hall, Westminster, and doors to the event open at 18:00. To find out more, please go to http://events.
intelligencesquared.com/ where tickets are available for £25.00. Half price student tickets are available...current-events.php?event= EVT0213 We are streaming it live and on-demand at http://www.
intelligencesquared.com/live ...
i will be watching the live stream of the event, and i'm really excited! it's free, so if you can't make it to the event, i highly recommend checking it out. i posted about this on monday on my tumblr and a lot of people expressed interest in it, as well. i'm very interested in seeing how class dynamics are addressed. i also adore grayson perry (well, what i know about him, and his deconstruction of conventional ideas of masculinity and transvestism) and i feel like a lot of very interesting and important questions about women's relationship to fashion could begin to be unpacked here. we'll see!

secondly, the debate about cultural appropriation, specifically in relation to native stereotypes, rages on. thankfully, this debate is spreading like wildfire across the internet, and discussions are starting to arise about what actions need to be taken.
- my culture is not a trend is really on fire, and a great resource for anyone interested in the topic. i really have to resist the urge to reblog every single one of their posts on tumblr! so good, so honest.
- published in january of 2009 (so way before this firestorm of online discussion really took off, which i would say was the spring of this year), see light outlines how to define and identity cultural appropriation. it's been making the rounds on tumblr and i thought some of you might be interested in checking it out.
- the comments on threadbared in response to the above pixie market advertisment are also amazing, as we have come to expect, appreciate and adore. all of these spaces we've carved out in the internet give me hope that we can bridge the gap between discussing the theoretical problems around cultural appropriation and the actions we can take to voice our opposition and encourage critical thinking around issues of "post"-colonialism in the fashion industry.
moving on!
along the same questions of "appropriation," we have this really well written and thought-provoking piece about the politics of the term genderqueer: questioning transphobia: appropriation of genderqueer identities. it is a very informative piece, definitely worth a read.
to end off our link sharing, here are two that the wonderful iris shared with me this week + an email tip-off:
- so what's the big deal with transcripts and stuff anyway? - about accessibility and the internet, HIGHLY recommended
- what's the difference between lesbian and queer? - if you've ever been confused about the use of the word queer in gay communities, especially with pride weeks happening around the world, now's the time to learn!
- dress tiara the merch girl: on challenging burlesque aesthetics - tiara the merch girl is all sorts of sassy and awesome, which goes hand in hand with being a performance artist based in brisbane, australia. here, she talks about about the issues of being a queer, non-white, political performer and how these aspects are particularly... welcome in certain circles. i love the way she clearly outlines ways she wants you to help her. also, follow her blog! it's great.


justyne (the eldest), yours truly (middle child syndrome right here) and jasmine (the baby)
photo by simon dumas
photo by simon dumas


christmas 2008 (yes those dresses were a joke)
now, to go rest my throbbing, aching head. hopefully this post was coherent!
goodnight!