Washington, Dec 15 (ANI): Adopting the veil is not just a sign of social stigmatisation, but also a fashion statement for many people, say Turkish experts.
Authors Ozlem Sandikci and Guliz Ger (both Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey) report that much like the first people who began wearing blue jeans or getting tattoos, adopting this "stigmatised" fashion signifies independence from the social norms of the secular country.
So while the veil is perceived as repressive to Westerners, some Turkish women adopt it as a sign of deviance from the values of their mothers and peers as well as for religious reasons.
The authors said that in a middle-class, urban, secular social milieu in Turkey, adopting the veil is a choice that runs against the grain of consumer socialization.
In many cases, Turkish women wear the veil to rebel against the tradition of their mothers' generation, which has been wearing Western garb since the 1920s.
The study found that the interaction among the market, religion, and the national and international political spheres underlies the emergence of new veiling as an attractive choice for individuals.
"Women, in their pursuit of freedom from the discomforts of various political and everyday anxieties and moral threats, willingly chose a stigma symbol and became part of a new community," wrote the authors.
The fashion industry is responding. The scarves and loose overcoats worn by Muslim women in the 1980s have been replaced by fashionable alternatives.
"As women compose new elegant, beautiful, and fashionable styles, they inspire others to adopt veiling. Fashionable veiling owes its spread and visibility partially to a new business sector claiming to 'make covering beautiful,'" wrote the researchers.
"Faced with increasing demand for fashionable covering, clothing companies catering to a newly emerging clientele proliferate. As new fashionable styles of covering spread and become visible, a new Islamist bourgeois aesthetics gets constructed," they added.
The study is published in the Journal of Consumer Research says one factor is fashion. (ANI)
|
Comments: