- May 2, 2012
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I call it appropriation, even if there's an attempt to understand the history, I think it's disingenuous to walk around in a dashiki and etc. when that's not the culture you were raised in or one even close. I don't question ppl tho, I let em cook.
Thoughts?
I call it appropriation, even if there's an attempt to understand the history, I think it's disingenuous to walk around in a dashiki and etc. when that's not the culture you were raised in or one even close. I don't question ppl tho, I let em cook.
I agree. When the dashiki trend came around I was ready to go find me the flyest one but after looking online I learned that most of those prints and patterns aren't actually traditional and aren't rooted in Africa. Stopped there. Gonna find me a African shop around here and pick out some threads
so real question: why does this matter to you? if the patterns were traditional but not made by africans, would that be ok?
definitionally, yes but as long as the person isn't fronting, i don't see it as disingenuous...given how culture can be not only so amorphous but also so commodified, it just seems unrealistic to attach a negattive connotation to it what ultimately has been by and large a good thing (although this prolly depends on one's perspective)...yes it is unfortunate that some have been able to profit by "taking" from cultures they were not a part of without compensating or even mentioning the og source but 1) i don't know how that would be solved, and 2) i think that it is cool that people can appreciate other people's culture to the point that they would want to take part in it, even if it is a small/superficial as just wearing the clothing...
i guess the other part is of this historical, like how things get appropriated and oft times eventually claimed by the appropriators...i think that is a problem for history to sort out...
I agree. When the dashiki trend came around I was ready to go find me the flyest one but after looking online I learned that most of those prints and patterns aren't actually traditional and aren't rooted in Africa. Stopped there. Gonna find me a African shop around here and pick out some threads

It's funny to read this because even in Africa, the colorful prints (Vlisco wax) used in every day clothing often come from Holland, and we don't really think about that when we visit the tailor. If we like it, it's getting worn.
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/...where_do_tribal_prints_really_come_from_.html
If we're gonna talk original, traditional African fabric, we have to look at things like Ghanaian Kente, Ndebele blankets (and other traditional fabrics from Southern Africa), Ndop (Western Cameroon), Sawa cloth, bazin (popular all over Western Africa), etc... Some are more accessible than others, and most are still used in formal attire.
Found this preview of a book about African textiles while looking for pics to post:
https://books.google.com/books?id=zmKZ7-y4Q3gC&pg=PA182&lpg=PA182&dq=nigeria+ndop&source=bl&ots=qKdXjPaXdW&sig=j6vRQjYOsSqc4G1xoPXN8aHN3cY&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiKv4zvzcTXAhUr0oMKHamVBx8Q6AEIVTAL#v=onepage&q=nigeria ndop&f=false