Description
Dress Cultures in Zambia provides a comprehensive anthropological study of how clothing functions as a window into Zambian history, culture, and identity. Karen Tranberg Hansen explores the complex relationships between local dress traditions, colonial influences, and global fashion exchanges that have shaped Zambian dress practices over time.
The book examines how garments carry meaning beyond their practical function, serving as markers of social status, cultural belonging, and personal expression. Hansen investigates the interwoven histories of dress in Zambia, tracing how external influences from trade, colonialism, and contemporary globalization have been negotiated and adapted within local contexts. Through detailed ethnographic analysis, the work reveals how everyday clothing choices reflect broader patterns of cultural change, economic systems, and individual agency.
This work is essential for understanding how material culture and fashion intersect with history, anthropology, and social identity in African contexts.







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