Description From Islam to Confucianism to Voodoo, dress plays a pivotal role in religious expression.
This book investigates how dress symbolically evidences both religious and social systems across a wide range of cultures - from Africa and South America to Asia, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Caribbean.
In some of these cultures, dress is part of a system of social control.
Gender issues feature prominently since the control of female sexuality is often of great importance to the world's religions.
Members of each ethno-religious group actively construct their own lives, and use dress symbolically.
A central tenet for many of these groups is that the soul is visually manifested on the body through dress.
Drawing on rich ethnographic case studies, this wide-ranging and interdisciplinary volume represents a major contribution to the study of both religion and dress.
About the Author Linda B.
Arthur Professor and Department Chair, Apparel Merchandising and Interior Design, Washington State Universit.