Arctic ClothingJonathan C. H. King, Birgit Pauksztat, Robert Storrie McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2005 - 160 sider In the Arctic, well designed and superbly tailored clothing allows people to hunt and survive in the world's harshest conditions. Both sea and land animals, birds and fish, provide raw materials for the creation of unique forms of highly efficient clothing - different types of parkas, trousers, layered footwear, gloves and headwear. Such clothing not only protects people but also connects societies to the environment that they inhabit and expresses the continuing importance of animals, birds and fish to these communities. Arctic clothing encompasses a great diversity of national and community styles and also contemporary and traditional costume making. Questions of identity, the semiotics and function of dress, and the copyright and ownership of design are explored along with the nature of people's creativity in rapidly changing traditional societies. The contemporary issues of changes in clothing, the importation of manufactured materials, developments in fashion, clothing and art, and the adaptation of Native clothing by explorers and for sportswear are all examined. Several essays address previously unpublished areas such as fish-skin clothing, hairnets, the use of grass, birds and costume, and kayak clothing. |
Indhold
Preface | 8 |
Keynote Address 23 133 | 23 |
Eskimo Sewing Techniques in Relation to Contemporary Sewing Techniques | 70 |
Womens Skin Coats from West Greenland | 84 |
Part IV | 99 |
Kayak Clothing in Contemporary Greenlandic Kayak Clubs | 115 |
Clothing in Inuit Art | 132 |
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Alaska Aleuts Alutiiq amauti animals anorak Arctic clothing artefacts artist beads bird-skin birds boots British Museum Canada Canadian Cape Dorset caribou caribou hair caribou skin century coat collection colour contemporary Copper Inuit culture dance decorated designs drawings dress East Greenland edge eider Eskimo Ethno European fabric fashion Figure fish skin front garments Graburn Greenland National hood hunters hunting identity Igloolik important Iñupiaq Iqallijuq Island kaapaaq kamik Kasigluk kayak kayak clothing Kayak Club Nuuk loon material mats mittens Museum of Denmark National Museum neoprene Norse North Greenland Nunavut Nuuk parka pattern Pauktuutit Photograph pieces ptarmigan Qaanaaq Qaqortoq Qilakitsoq Rasmussen seal sealskin clothing seamstresses sewing sewn sinew skin clothing skin embroideries skin preparation snowy owl stitches strips style taperrnat Tasiilaq tassels textiles thread trade traditional trim trousers Tunumiit twined grass village waterproof wearing West Western whaling winter woman women worn Yup'ik