Anti-colonial Dress
4/15/19
I. Mohandas K. Gandhi (1869-1948) and the Political Semiotics of Khadi
A. Gandhi as sartorial semiotician1. Used clothes symbolically to convey political messagesB. Gandhi's life through clothes
2. Were messages correctly interpreted?1. Born in Porbandar, West coast of IndiaC. Gandhi's intended messages through khadi
2. Respectable middle-caste merchant family
3. Educated
4. 1888-1891: studies law in London, wears Western clothes
5. 1891: returns to India, urges family to wear Western clothes
6. 1893: moves to South Africaa. Barrister representing Indian rights7. 1915: Returns to India
b. Western dress, Bengali turban
c. Turban incident in Durban court, begins using dress to make political statements
d. 1909-10: critique of European clothingi. Doesn't civilizee. 1911: urges Indians to weave, still wearing Western clothes
ii. Promotes bodily pleasure over spirituality
iii. Manchester mills have impoverished India
iv. Approves swadeshi (home-produced goods) movement among Bengali men
f. 1913: South African authorities shot Indian coal minersi. Gandhi appears in white Indian suit
ii. Letter to press explains: symbol of mourning, deny comfort to purge self of wrongs being done to one's peoplea. wears outfit of Kathiawad peasant8. 1921-1948: Khadi loincloth
b. Wears dhoti
c. Encourages swadeshi (home-produced goods), wearing of khadi (home-spun and woven cloth)a. Intended for five weeks to promote swaraj (self-rule)
b. Sign of mourning for poverty
c. solidarity with poor, symbol of their plight1. Dependence on cheap Manchester cloth made Indians dependent on foreign civilizationD. Goals never achieved, Gandhi wore khadi loincloth until his death
2. European civilization = decadent, materialistic, egotistical
3. Because khadi was expensive, poor would have to wear loincloths
4. Remove shame associated with khadi loincloth
5. Revive Indian industry
6. Khadi as key to Indian independence and self-reliancea. Indians could be employed7. Khadi : foreign-made :: good : evil :: purity : defilement
b. "Untouchables" would lose stigma
c. Villages would be self-sufficient
d. Indian people united through shared dress
e. Combat British rule non-violently
f. Improve morality
8. Gandhi's goals: "The whole country will be clothed in khadi. That is my dream. This is a fight to finish" (82).
E. "Discrepancy between intention and interpretation" (64)1. Need for media statementsF. Khadi cap
2. Close associates simplified dress
3. Others laughed, called loincloth indecent or savage
4. Gandhi's Mahatma-nessa. Mahatma = Great Soul
b. Saintly religious ascetic
c. Mahatma image normalized his dress
d. Some foreigners called Gandhi "Christ-like"
e. Mahatma-ness: lost specifics of political message, increased number of followers1. Unify Indian men
2. Simple, made of khadi
3. Just a cap
II. Other Anti-Colonial Sartorial Dilemmas
A. Gandhi brought problem of what to wear out of closet, into public politics
B. Coercive side of battle of dress1. Attacks on those not wearing khadi or capC. 1920-1, Congress Party wears khadi, British prohibit civil servants from wearing it
2. Women forced by husbands to wear khadi
3. Diffuse moral coercion, khadi = good, pure
D. Did Khadi unify Indians?1. Became marker of urban elite statusE. Khadi compromisesa. Poor continued to wear more colorful clothes, not white khadi2. Women and khadi
b. Weave: fine weave = elite, coarse = poor
c. silk khadi raises moral issues, decadent and destroys silk wormsa. Gandhi: white khadi as a-sexual3. Religious issues
b. White khadi too simple, not beautiful
c. Denial of self-expression through clothing
d. Can't mark status
e. White symbolizes widowhood
f. Solution: dye khadi to make colored saris and uniformsa. Hindu: dhotis4. Did Khadi represent internal values?
b. Muslims: kurta pyjamas
c. Sikhs: turbans
5. Khadi shifts problem of what to wear from style to fabric1. Imitation khadi appeals to Congress Party membersF. Pressure to use khadi, selectivity of individual interpretation
2. Khadi cap with Western clothes
3. Strategic: Khadi in public, Western clothes at home, popular among politicians today
4. Foreign underwear underneath khadi
5. Khadi underclothes underneath Western suit (civil servants)
6. Khadi Western suits seen by public as loss of Indian-ness
G. Didn't bridge gap between urban elites and villagers
H. Hebdige: problem of semiotic resistance, revisited
For more information, contact: aleshkow@holycross.edu