Neo-ethnic Self-Styling among Young Indigenous People of Brazil: Re-Appropriating Ethnicity through Cultural Hybridity

Author:

Aoyagi Hiroshi1ORCID,Kovacic Mateja2ORCID,Baines Stephen Grant3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Kokushikan University, Japan

2. University of Oxford, United Kingdom

3. Universidade de Brasília, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract This article examines a conspicuous, vastly disseminating cultural practice among the young Indigenous people of Brazil to hybridize their ethnic motifs with global fashion in order to classify their glocal mode of being. Young Indigenous subjects generally perceive the modal practice to be ethnically appropriating in their own generational right. Through ethnographic observations coupled with theoretical reflections on cultural hybridity, the authors will highlight how neo-ethnic fashion enables initially marginalized category of Indigenous ethnicity to be brought to public attention on a global scale. Neo-ethnic self-styling operates as a means to re-appropriate heritage in trans-traditional ways at a time when ethnicity itself is increasingly becoming a globally trendy subject. Social networking service plays a crucial role in disseminating the phenomena across different ethnic groups.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Urban Studies,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies

Reference52 articles.

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3. Fashion Theory: An Introduction;BARNARD Malcolm,2014

4. The Fashion System;BARTHES Roland,1990

5. The Language of Fashion;BARTHES Roland,2013

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