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Refashioning a Body Politic in Colonial Louisiana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2003

Diana DiPaolo Loren
Affiliation:
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, 11 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge MA 02138, USA.

Abstract

This article examines the boundaries of clothing and the body in constructions of political identity in French colonial Louisiana. The study situates constructions of political identity among regulatory demands over the bodies of colonial subjects and the practices of taste and social distinction. It is argued that dress allowed colonial subjects to move into political spaces usually occupied by European colonizers. Archaeological, ethnohistoric, and visual data are used to investigate how French colonizers attempted to construct a body politic by regulating dress and the bodies of colonial subjects, while colonial ‘others’ attempted to constitute themselves as political bodies through self-fashioning.

Type
SPECIAL SECTION: Embodying Identity in Archaeology
Copyright
2003 The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

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