Fashion, feminism and futility
Fashion Pakistan Week (not to be confused with Pakistan Fashion Week) was held recently with the usual fanfare that surrounds such undertakings; there were ‘red carpets’, there were live tweets, there were catwalks and models and glitz and glamour. Fashion houses, several of them led by the sisters, wives and daughters of this or that industrial tycoon, presented their ‘collections’; everyone beamed and glowed and was feted.
There were French words like ‘prêt’ to add hauteur to the couture, routine allusions to the Raj to impart to the rest the sumptuousness of eras past. In sum, it was new, but all very old; an event dominated by women, but one that did nothing for them beyond reiterating their already accepted status as decorative playthings.
Also read: FPW Day1: Shehla Chatoor and Sania Maskatiya win big, other collections fall short
Fashion week or events around fashion are complicated things in Pakistan; the heavy and hefty shadow of bombs and threats and terror has cast its shadow to such an extent over cultural production in the country that any effort, however replete with sexism and elitism, seems to require applause. It is not entirely undeserved; the obscurantism mandating that women not be visible at all is in a very basic sense opposed by events that make them visible and central.