Dressing As Protest & The Violence Of Fashion Judgement
Some time ago, I watched a woman walk into a coffee shop. She was wearing a neon yellow jacket, neon yellow sneakers & micro shorts and sported a ponytail on either side of the head, held back with – you guessed it, neon yellow ties. She looked like she was in her early 30s. Uncharitable thoughts and judgemental ideas consume me – about her over-coordination, skin exposure, and colour choice. The vehemence of my feelings shocked me. What is it about dressing that incites such violent responses?
Earlier in the year, an old friend attacked my saree styling, called me names, and threatened to walk away if I ever ‘dared’ wear one in his presence. He refused to apologise when I called him out for his misbehaviour. The next day, he trolled my blogs.
I used to wear a bright red fascinator to work. I was catcalled at the station, followed home and worst of all, found nasty notes left on my office table. I wrote about it on my blog and shortly after a feminist woman took a dig at me, calling me a loser for writing about a hair accessory and told me to get a life. It was upsetting because I was not breaking any rules or harming anybody. I was even being attacked for being upset about it on my blog.
What is it about apparel that incites such violent responses in other people? When I discovered it in myself, I realised I couldn’t write it off as other people’s issues. It doesn’t matter if I didn’t act on it. I thought it. I too, felt a powerful negative reaction to a stranger’s dressing. Why?
Families, male partners, female companions, the fashion industry, media standards, and gender definitions police our bodies. I enjoy people’s confusion when I wear a saree (sanskari) with sneakers (tomboy). Or green lipstick (wild) with a kurta (traditional). I tell a story with every look. And my stories force people to reconsider their assumptions.
Each time we see someone presenting differently from what we expect, we experience shock. Alongside come our memories of having been policed for similar behaviour. Maybe we resent the person’s courage. Maybe we hate their naivete. Maybe we miss the security that a prison offers us because all imposed rules are prisons.
I dress to assert my identity and that itself is a protest. I guess that’s true for the girl in the coffee shop too. The very act of dressing is a political statement.