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| Dressed to Kill: Women's Fashion and Body Politics in North Korea |
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Thursday, October 25, 2007 Communist regimes are often described as "drab," but North Korea is highly fashion conscious-a place where style and politics go hand in hand. For decades, North Korea's political leaders have been preoccupied with designing uniforms for almost every sector of society. Fashion, especially women's fashion, is seen as a national project, meant to promote group identity and ideology. Like many authoritarian regimes, North Korean designers have been drawn to masculine, military styles that seem to embody revolutionary spirit. But women's fashion in North Korea also allows for a contradictory sense of traditional femininity. Suk-Young Kim, Professor of Theater at the University of California at Santa Barbara, will discuss the purpose of state-directed fashion in North Korea, as well as the ways in which the country's dress codes affect women's body politics. Suk-Young Kim is an assistant professor of Theatre at the University of California at Santa Barbara. Her research interests include East Asian performance, gender and nationalism, Korean cultural studies and Russian literature. She has received the International Federation for Theatre Research's New Scholar Prize (2004), the American Society for Theater Research Fellowship (2006) and the Library of Congress Kluge Fellowship (2006). Her articles have appeared in Theatre Research International, Theatre Journal and The Drama Review. She is currently working on a book project titled Illusive Utopia: Theater and Film in North Korea, which explores how propaganda performances affect everyday life in North Korea. Photo: from Chosŏn Yesul (조선예술), September 1981 Registration Fee:
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Exhibiting Korea

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