Marc Chevalier
Gone Home
- Messages
- 18,192
- Location
- Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
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In a now-closed thread, Tomasso and Jake Fink delved into a very interesting subject. Tomasso posted the photo above. It got a few of us to thinking about clothing, choice and coercion. When it comes to what we wear, when is a "choice" so influenced by fear that it isn't much of a choice at all?
The Afghan burka, in and of itself, is inoffensive. If a woman wants to wear it because she feels good about the garment and what it symbolizes (be it modesty or devotion to God), then by all means, let her wear the burka and be left in peace. If, however, a woman does not wish to wear the burka -- and knows that by not wearing it, she could be shamed, beaten, imprisoned, or worse -- then her "choice" to ultimately wear it is an empty one.
What do you think? Have you ever felt that your "choice" of what to wear was, in essence, no choice at all? In OUR society, does the scale ever tip so far that coercion takes over?
.
In a now-closed thread, Tomasso and Jake Fink delved into a very interesting subject. Tomasso posted the photo above. It got a few of us to thinking about clothing, choice and coercion. When it comes to what we wear, when is a "choice" so influenced by fear that it isn't much of a choice at all?
The Afghan burka, in and of itself, is inoffensive. If a woman wants to wear it because she feels good about the garment and what it symbolizes (be it modesty or devotion to God), then by all means, let her wear the burka and be left in peace. If, however, a woman does not wish to wear the burka -- and knows that by not wearing it, she could be shamed, beaten, imprisoned, or worse -- then her "choice" to ultimately wear it is an empty one.
What do you think? Have you ever felt that your "choice" of what to wear was, in essence, no choice at all? In OUR society, does the scale ever tip so far that coercion takes over?
.