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Discussion of the Issues around Dress Codes in Colleges and Universities: msg#00047

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Subject: Discussion of the Issues around Dress Codes in Colleges and Universities


PUKAR Gender & Space Project invites you to a discussion of the wider issues
around the institutionalizing of Dress Codes by Universities across the country

Date: Tuesday, 20 December 2005
Time 6.30 pm
Venue: PUKAR Office
Address: 2nd Floor, Kamanwala Chambers, Opposite Strand Book Stall, Sir.
P M Road, Fort, Mumbai 400001. Tel: 5574-8152


Do we need a dress code in colleges? Whom is the dress code directed at? What
are the kinds of clothing they object to? What are the varied grounds on which
these objections are voiced? Is the debate about dress codes only about
clothing? Or is it also about something else?

And if it’s about more than dress codes then what are these other things; these
anxieties that play themselves out in the debate on dress codes? The sexuality
of heterosexual couples outside marriage? The fear that information on safe sex
will encourage sex? The threat posed by the non-normative sexual of gay,
lesbian or trans-gender people? The purity of narrowly religion written on the
bodies of women? The purity of a regional culture reflected in the virtue of
its women? The boundaries of caste, race or nation? Narrowly defined visions of
Indian-ness?

It’s not just Indians who are worried about clothing. The French have
acrimonious public debates about them. The Turks have used clothing to define
nation. The Iranians used clothing as revolutionary symbol only to have it
haunt them in the post-revolutionary society. The Dutch are still grappling
with the presence of veiled women in public space. The US Americans demonstrate
suspicion of terrorist intention on the basis of clothing.

We submit that that dress codes are merely symptomatic of a time when not just
the way people dress is sought to be controlled but the way we walk, behave,
and exchange thoughts, ideas and affection. The intention of this roundtable
discussion is to raise questions not just about dress codes but also the varied
issues that have come up recently: the sanctions against couples in many
cities, the length of Sania Mirza’s skirts, the brouhaha over actor Khushboo’s
comment on pre-marital safe-sex, moral codes relating to women’s sexuality, the
sanctions against same sex relationship, the Imrana case, the varied fatwas on
Muslim women, the anxieties about the cross-community romances during Navratri
are only some of them. It is important that we discuss these concerns not in
isolation (which is how they are often reported) but as inter-linked issues
that seek to censor our voices and define our choices.

We invite you to participate in a discussion of the wider issues around the
institutionalizing of Dress Codes by Universities across the country


The Discussion will be initiated by an audio documentary

Then They Came For My Jeans…

The audio documentary raises questions about the dress codes being imposed on
college students in various universities.
The documentary is located in the broader context of the PUKAR Gender & Space
project which seeks to explore the ways by which women experience public
spaces, accessing them against all odds, transforming the nature of urban life
in the process.

A 12 minute audio documentary
Produced by: Studio PUKAR
Executive Producers: Sameera Khan & Shilpa Phadke
Sound Recordist & Editor: Anita Kushwaha
Creative Consultant: Shilpa Gupta
Documentation: Shriti K
Cover Design: Shilpa Ranade
Thanks to BMM Dept., SIES College for Recording Assistance
Funded by: Indo-Dutch Programme on Alternative Development



Date: Tuesday, 20 December 2005
Time 6.30 pm
Venue: PUKAR Office
Address: 2nd Floor, Kamanwala Chambers, Opposite Strand Book Stall, Sir.
P M Road, Fort, Mumbai 400001. Tel: 5574-8152






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