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Widespread cultural sensibilities about gender, sexuality, age, and status converge on the dressed body, weighing down on women’s bodies much more heavily than on men’s. Reactions to the miniskirt go to the heart of normative cultural assumptions about the hierarchical nature of gender relations in most of Zambia’s ethnic groups and across the country’s class spectrum. When miniskirts first became fashionable in the late 1960s and early 1970s, they fueled discussions about women’s proper place in the new nation; ‘foreign’ influences were blamed for independent women’s lack of morality. In the 1990s when the miniskirt returned, the debate developed a sharper and violent edge, mobilising ideas associating sexuality with women’s dress practice. Stripping incidents of women wearing short skirts and tight clothing occurred in downtown space again and again during the 2000s. Recently they have been followed by protests that are turning violence against women into a general social issue.
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