Class9 History Unit08 NCERT TextBook English Edition
Class9 History Unit08 NCERT TextBook English Edition
Class9 History Unit08 NCERT TextBook English Edition
It is easy to forget that there is a history to the clothes we wear. All societies observe certain rules, some of them quite strict, about the way in which men, women and children should dress, or how different social classes and groups should present themselves. These norms come to define the identity of people, the way they see themselves, the way they want others to see them. They shape our notions of grace and beauty, ideas of modesty and shame. As times change and societies are transformed, these notions also alter. Modifications in clothing come to reflect these changes. The emergence of the modern world is marked by dramatic changes in clothing. In this chapter, we will look at some of the histories of clothing in the modern period, that is in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Why are these two centuries important? Before the age of democratic revolutions and the development of capitalist markets in eighteenth-century Europe, most people dressed according to their regional codes, and were limited by the types of clothes and the cost of materials that were available in their region. Clothing styles were also strictly regulated by class, gender or status in the social hierarchy. After the eighteenth century, the colonisation of most of the world by Europe, the spread of democratic ideals and the growth of an industrial society, completely changed the ways in which people thought about dress and its meanings. People could use styles and materials that were drawn from other cultures and locations, and western dress styles for men were adopted worldwide. In Chapter I you have seen how the French Revolution transformed many aspects of social and political life. The revolution also swept away existing dress codes, known as the sumptuary laws. Let us look briefly at what these laws were.
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Chapter VIII
New words Cockade Cap, usually worn on one side. Ermine Type of fur.
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Fig.1 An upper-class couple in eighteenth-century England. Painting by the English artist Thomas Gainsborough (17271788)
Fig.2 An aristocratic couple on the eve of the French Revolution. Notice the sumptuous clothing, the elaborate headgear, and the lace edgings on the dress the lady is wearing. She also has a corset inside the dress. This was meant to confine and shape her waist so that she appeared narrow waisted. The nobleman, as was the custom of the time, is wearing a long soldiers coat, knee breeches, silk stockings and high heeled shoes. Both of them have elaborate wigs and both have their faces painted a delicate shade of pink, for the display of natural skin was considered uncultured.
Not all sumptuary laws were meant to emphasise social hierarchy. Some sumptuary laws were passed to protect home production against imports. For instance, in sixteenth-century England, velvet caps made with material imported from France and Italy were popular amongst men. England passed a law which compelled all persons over six years of age, except those of high position, to wear woollen caps made in England, on Sundays and all holy days. This law remained in effect for twenty-six years and was very useful in building up the English woollen industry.
Look at Figures 2 - 5. Write 150 words on what the differences in the pictures tell us about the society and culture in France at the time of the Revolution.
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Box 1
Activity
Fig.6 Scene at an upper-class wedding by the English painter William Hogarth (1697-1764)
Many women believed in the ideals of womanhood. The ideals were in the air they breathed, the literature they read, the education they had received at school and at home. From childhood they grew up to believe that having a small waist was a womanly duty. Suffering pain was essential to being a woman. To be seen as attractive, to be womanly, they had to wear the corset. The torture and pain this inflicted on the body was to be accepted as normal. But not everyone accepted these values. Over the nineteenth century, ideas changed. By the 1830s, women in England began agitating for democratic rights. As the suffrage movement developed, many began campaigning for dress reform. Womens magazines described how tight dresses and corsets caused deformities and illness among young
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Fig.7 A child in an aristocratic household by the English painter William Hogarth (16971764). Notice the tiny waist even at this age, probably held in by a corset, and the sweeping gown which would restrict her movement.
New words Stays Support as part of a womans dress to hold the body straight Corset A closely fitting and stiff inner bodice, worn by women to give shape and support to the figure. Suffrage The right to vote. The suffragettes wanted the right for women to vote.
girls. Such clothing restricted body growth and hampered blood circulation. Muscles remained underdeveloped and the spines got bent. Doctors reported that many women were regularly complaining of acute weakness, felt languid, and fainted frequently. Corsets then became necessary to hold up the weakened spine.
Source A
Mary Somerville, one of the first woman mathematicians, describes in her memoirs the experience of her childhood days: Although perfectly straight and well made, I was encased in stiff stays, with a steel busk in front, while above my frock, bands drew my shoulder back until the shoulder blades met. Then a steel rod with a semi-circle, which went under my chin, was clasped to the steel busk in my stays. In this constrained state, I and most of the younger girls had to prepare our lessons. From Martha Somerville, ed., Personal Recollections from Early Life to Old Age of Mary Somerville, London 1873.
Activity
Read Sources A and B. What do they tell you about the ideas of clothing in Victorian society? If you were the principal in Mary Somervilles school how would you have justified the clothing practices?
Source B
Many government officials of the time were alarmed at the health implications of the prevailing styles of dressing amongst women. Consider the following attack on the corset: It is evident physiologically that air is the pabulum of life, and that the effect of a tight cord round the neck and of tight lacing differ only in degrees for the strangulations are both fatal. To wear tight stays in many cases is to wither, to waste, to die. The Registrar General in the Ninth Annual Report of 1857.
Source C
Do you know how the famous English poet John Keats (1795 1821) described his ideal woman? He said she was like a milk-white lamb that bleats for mans protection. In his novel Vanity Fair (1848), Thackeray described the charm of a woman character, Amelia, in these words: I think it was her weakness which was her principle charm, a kind of sweet submission and softness, which seemed to appeal to each man she met, for his sympathy and protection.
Activity
In what ways do you think these notions of weakness and dependence came to be reflected in womens clothing?
New words Busk A strip of wood, whalebone or steel in front of the corset to stiffen and support it Pabulum Anything essential to maintain life and growth.
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In America, a similar movement developed amongst the white settlers on the east coast. Traditional feminine clothes were criticised on a variety of grounds. Long skirts, it was said, swept the grounds and collected filth and dirt. This caused illness. The skirts were voluminous and difficult to handle. They hampered movement and prevented women from working and earning. Reform of the dress, it was said, would change the position of women. If clothes were comfortable and convenient, then women could work, earn their living, and become independent. In the 1870s, the National Woman Suffrage Association headed by Mrs Stanton, and the American Woman Suffrage Association dominated by Lucy Stone both campaigned for dress reform. The argument was: simplify dress, shorten skirts, and abandon corsets. On both sides of the Atlantic, there was now a movement for rational dress reform.
Box 2
The movement for Rational Dress Reform Mrs Amelia Bloomer, an American, was the first dress reformer to launch loose tunics worn over ankle-length trousers. The trousers were known as bloomers, rationals, or knickerbockers. The Rational Dress Society was started in England in 1881, but did not achieve significant results. It was the First World War that brought about radical changes in womens clothing. Fig.8 A woman in nineteenth-century USA, before the dress reforms. Notice the flowing gown sweeping the ground. Reformers reacted to this type of clothing for women.
The reformers did not immediately succeed in changing social values. They had to face ridicule and hostility. Conservatives everywhere opposed change. They lamented that women who gave up traditional norms of dressing no longer looked beautiful, and lost their femininty and grace. Faced with persistent attacks, many women reformers changed back into traditional clothes to conform to conventions. By the end of the nineteenth century, however, change was clearly in the air. Ideals of beauty and styles of clothing were both transformed under a variety of pressures. People began accepting the ideas of reformers they had earlier ridiculed. With new times came new values.
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3 New Times
What were these new values? What created the pressure for change? Many changes were made possible in Britain due to the introduction of new materials and technologies. Other changes came about because of the two world wars and the new working conditions for women. Let us retrace our steps a few centuries to see what these changes were.
Fig.9 Changes in clothing in the early twentieth century. Fig.9a Even for middle- and upper-class women, clothing styles changed. Skirts became shorter and frills were done away with. Fig.9b Women working at a British ammunition factory during the First World War. At this time thousands of women came out to work as war production created a demand for increased labour.The need for easy movement changed clothing styles.
New words Chintz Cotton cloth printed with designs and flowers. From the Hindi word chint.
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Yet until 1914, clothes were ankle length, as they had been since the thirteenth century. By 1915, however, the hemline of the skirt rose dramatically to mid-calf. Why this sudden change?
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Fig.12 Cartoon, The Modern Patriot, by Gaganendranath Tagore, early twentieth century. A sarcastic picture of a foolish man who copies western dress but claims to love his motherland with all his heart. The pot-bellied man with cigarette and Western clothes was ridiculed in many cartoons of the time.
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trousers off in the street and walk home in just tunic and undergarments. This difference between outer and inner worlds is still observed by some men today. Still others tried a slightly different solution to the same dilemma. They attempted to combine Western and Indian forms of dressing. These changes in clothing, however, had a turbulent history.
the marketplace and stripped of their upper cloths. Houses were looted and chapels burned. Finally, the government issued another proclamation permitting Shanar women, whether Christian or Hindu, to wear a jacket, or cover their upper bodies in any manner whatever, but not like the women of high caste.
Fig.14 Europeans bringing gifts to Shah Jehan, Agra, 1633, from the Padshahnama. Notice the European visitors hats at the bottom of the picture, creating a contrast with the turbans of the courtiers.
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At the same time, Indians were expected to wear Indian clothes to office and follow Indian dress codes. In 1824 - 1828, GovernorGeneral Amherst insisted that Indians take their shoes off as a sign of respect when they appeared before him, but this was not strictly followed. By the mid-nineteenth century, when Lord Dalhousie was Governor- General, shoe respect was made stricter, and Indians were made to take off their shoes when entering any government institution; only those who wore European clothes were exempted from this rule. Many Indian government servants were increasingly uncomfortable with these rules. In 1862, there was a famous case of defiance of the shoe respect rule in a Surat courtroom. Manockjee Cowasjee Entee, an assessor in the Surat Fouzdaree Adawlut, refused to take off his shoes in the court of the sessions judge. The judge insisted that he take off his shoes as that was the Indian way of showing respect to superiors. But Manockjee remained adamant. He was barred entry into the courtroom and he sent a letter of protest to the governor of Bombay. The British insisted that since Indians took off their shoes when they entered a sacred place or home, they should do so when they entered the courtroom. In the controversy that followed, Indians urged that taking off shoes in sacred places and at home was linked to two different questions. One: there was the problem of dirt and filth. Shoes collected the dirt on the road. This dirt could not be allowed into spaces that were clean, particularly when people in Indian homes sat on the ground. Second, leather shoes and the filth that stuck under it were seen as polluting. But public buildings like the courtroom were different from home. But it took many years before shoes were permitted into the courtroom.
India and the Contemporary World
Source D
When asked to take off his shoes at the Surat Fouzdaree Adawlut at Surat in 1862, Manockjee told the judge that he was willing to take off even his turban but not his shoes. He said: Taking off my pugree would have been a greater insult to myself than to the court, but I would have submitted to it, because there is nothing of conscience, or religion involved in it. I hold no respect or disrespect, embodied or disembodied in the shoes, but the putting on of our turban is the greatest of all respects that we pay. We do not have our pugrees on when at home, but when we go out to see respectable persons we are bound by social etiquette to have it on whilst we [Parsees] in our social intercourse never ever take off our shoes before any Parsee however great
Activity
Imagine yourself to be a Muslim pleader in the Allahabad high court in the late nineteenth century. What kind of clothes would you wear? Would they be very different from what you wore at home?
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Fig.17 Jnanadanandini Tagore (on the left) with her husband Satyendranath Tagore and other family members. She is wearing a Brahmika sari with a blouse modelled on a Western gown. (Courtesy: Rabindra Bhawan Photo
Archives, Visva Bharati University, Shantiniketan)
Fig.18 Sarala daughter of RC Dutt. Note the Parsi-bordered sari with the high collared and sleeved velvet blouse showing how clothing styles flowed across regions and cultures. Fig. 16 Lady Bachoobai (1890), a well-known Parsi social activist. She is wearing a silk gara embroidered with swans and peonies, a common English flower.
(courtesy: Parsi Zoroastrian Project, New Delhi.)
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However, these attempts at devising a pan-Indian style did not fully succeed. Women of Gujarat, Kodagu, Kerala and Assam continue to wear different types of sari.
Source E Some people supported the attempt to change womens clothing, others opposed it.
Any civilised nation is against the kind of clothing in use in the present time among women of our country. Indeed it is a sign of shamelessness. Educated men have been greatly agitated about it, almost everyone wishes for another kind of civilised clothing there is a custom here of women wearing fine and transparent clothing which reveals the whole body. Such shameless attire in no way allows one to frequent civilised company such clothes can stand in the way of our moral improvement. Soudamini Khastagiri, Striloker Paricchad (1872) Fig.19 Maharani of Travancore (1930). Note the Western shoes and the modest longsleeved blouse. This style had become common among the upper classes by the early twentieth century.
Source F
C. Kesavans autobiography Jeevita Samaram recalls his mother-in-laws first encounter with a blouse gifted by her sister-in-law in the late nineteenth century: It looked good, but I felt ticklish wearing it. I took it off, folded it carefully and brimming with enthusiasm, showed it to my mother. She gave me a stern look and said Where are you going to gallivant in this? Fold it and keep it in the box. I was scared of my mother. She could kill me. At night I wore the blouse and showed it to my husband. He said it looked good [the next morning] I came out wearing the blouse I didnt notice my mother coming. Suddenly I heard her break a piece from a coconut branch. When I turned round, she was behind me fierce and furious she said Take it off you want to walk around in shirts like Muslim women?
Activity
These two quotations (Sources E and F), from about the same period are from two different regions of India, Kerala and Bengal. What do they tell you about the very different notions of shame regarding womens attire?
eighteenth century. However, the Industrial Revolution in Britain, which mechanised spinning and weaving and greatly increased the demand for raw materials such as cotton and indigo, changed Indias status in the world economy. Political control of India helped the British in two ways: Indian peasants could be forced to grow crops such as indigo, and cheap British manufacture easily replaced coarser Indian one. Large numbers of Indian weavers and spinners were left without work, and important textile weaving centres such as Murshidabad, Machilipatnam and Surat declined as demand fell. Yet by the middle of the twentieth century, large numbers of people began boycotting British or mill-made cloth and adopting khadi, even though it was coarser, more expensive and difficult to obtain. How did this change come about? In 1905, Lord Curzon decided to partition Bengal to control the growing opposition to British rule. The Swadeshi movement developed in reaction to this measure. People were urged to boycott British goods of all kinds and start their own industries for the manufacture of goods such as matchboxes and cigarettes. Mass protests followed, with people vowing to cleanse themselves of colonial rule. The use of khadi was made a patriotic duty. Women were urged to throw away their silks and glass bangles and wear simple shell bangles. Rough homespun was glorified in songs and poems to popularise it. The change of dress appealed largely to the upper castes and classes rather than to those who had to make do with less and could not afford the new products. After 15 years, many among the upper classes also returned to wearing European dress.
Clothing: A Social History
Fig.20 The familiar image of Mahatma Gandhi, bare chested and at his spinning wheel.
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Activity
If you were a poor peasant would you have willingly taken to giving up mill-made cloth?
Though many people rallied to the cause of nationalism at this time, it was almost impossible to compete with cheap British goods that had flooded the market. Despite its limitations, the experiment with Swadeshi gave Mahatma Gandhi important ideas about using cloth as a symbolic weapon against British rule.
made spinning on the charkha and the daily use of khadi, or coarse cloth made from homespun yarn, very powerful symbols. These were not only symbols of self-reliance but also of resistance to the use of British mill-made cloth. Mahatma Gandhis life and his experiments with clothing sum up the changing attitude to dress in the Indian subcontinent. As a boy from a Gujarati Bania family, he usually wore a shirt with a dhoti or pyjama, and sometimes a coat. When he went to London to study law as a boy of 19 in 1888, he cut off the tuft on his head and dressed in a Western suit so that he would not be laughed at. On his return, he continued to wear Western suits, topped with a turban. As a lawyer in Johannesburg, South Africa in the 1890s, he still wore Western clothes. Soon he decided that dressing unsuitably was a more powerful political statement. In Durban in 1913, Gandhi first appeared in a lungi and kurta with his head shaved as a sign of mourning to protest against the shooting of Indian coal miners. On his return to India in 1915, he decided to dress like a Kathiawadi peasant. Only in 1921 did he adopt the short dhoti, the form of dress he wore until his death. On 2 September 1921, a year after launching the non-cooperation movement, which sought swaraj in one year, he announced:
Fig.23 Mahatma Gandhi (seated front right) London, 1890, at the age of 21. Note the typical Western three-piece suit.
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Fig.26 Mahatma Gandhi with Kasturba, shortly after his return from South Africa. Dressed simply, he later confessed to feeling awkward amongst the Westernised Bombay elite. He said that he was more at home among the labourers in South Africa.
I propose to discard at least up to 31st of October my topi and vest and to content myself with a loincloth, and a chaddar whenever necessary for protection of my body. I adopt the change because I have always hesitated to advise anything I may not be prepared to follow At this time, he did not want to use this dress all his life and only wanted to experiment for a month or two. But soon he saw this as his duty to the poor, and he never wore any other dress. He consciously rejected the well-known clothes of the Indian ascetic and adopted the dress of the poorest Indian. Khadi, white and coarse, was to him a sign of purity, of simplicity, and of poverty. Wearing it became also a symbol of nationalism, a rejection of Western mill- made cloth. He wore the short dhoti without a shirt when he went to England for the Round Table Conference in 1931. He refused to compromise and wore it even before King George V at Buckingham Palace. When he was asked by journalists whether he was wearing enough clothes to go before the King, he joked that that the King had enough on for both of us!
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Conclusion
Changes in styles of clothing are thus linked up with shifts in cultural tastes and notions of beauty, with changes within the economy and society, and with issues of social and political conflict. So when we see clothing styles alter we need to ask: why do these changes take place? What do they tell us about society and its history? What can they tell us about changes in tastes and technologies, markets and industries?
Activity
Can you think of other reasons why the use of khadi could not spread among some classes, castes and regions of India?
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Box 4
The Gandhi cap Some time after his return to India from South Africa in 1915, Mahatma Gandhi transformed the Kashmiri cap that he sometimes used into a cheap white cotton khadi cap. For two years from 1919, he himself wore the cap, and then gave it up, but by this time it had become part of the nationalist uniform and even a symbol of defiance. For example, the Gwalior state tried to prohibit its use in 1921 during the non co-operation movement. During the Khilafat movement the cap was worn by large numbers of Hindus and Muslims. A group of Santhals who attacked the police in 1922 in Bengal demanding the release of Santhal prisoners believed that the Gandhi cap would protect them from bullets: three of them died as a result. Large numbers of nationalists defiantly wore the Gandhi cap and were even beaten or arrested for doing so. With the rise of the Khilafat movement in the post-First World War years, the fez, a tasseled Turkish cap, became a sign of anticolonialism in India. Though many Hindus as in Hyderabad for instance also wore the fez, it soon became identified solely with Muslims.
Fig.31 On his visit to Europe in 1931. By now his clothes had become a powerful political statement against Western cultural domination.
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Activities
1. Imagine you are the 14-year-old child of a trader. Write a paragraph on what you feel about the sumptuary laws in France. 2. Can you think of any expectations of proper and improper dress which exist today? Give examples of two forms of clothing which would be considered disrespectful in certain places but acceptable in others.
Questions
1. Explain the reasons for the changes in clothing patterns and materials in the eighteenth century. 2. What were the sumptuary laws in France? 3. Give any two examples of the ways in which European dress codes were different from Indian dress codes. 4. In 1805, a British official, Benjamin Heyne, listed the manufactures of Bangalore which included the following: Womens cloth of different musters and names Coarse chintz Muslins Silk cloths Of this list, which kind of cloth would have definitely fallen out of use in the early 1800s and why? 5. Suggest reasons why women in nineteenth century India were obliged to continue wearing traditional Indian dress even when men switched over to the more convenient Western clothing. What does this show about the position of women in society? 6. Winston Churchill described Mahatma Gandhi as a seditious Middle Temple Lawyer now posing as a half naked fakir. What provoked such a comment and what does it tell you about the symbolic strength of Mahatma Gandhis dress? 7. Why did Mahatma Gandhis dream of clothing the nation in khadi appeal only to some sections of Indians?
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Activities