For today's blog post, I'd like to summarize my part of the meet & greet, provide a list of the books mentioned during the chat, as well as officially reveal my professional announcement.
After introductions, Kristen and I took turns describing our current research and projects. Kristen mentioned several interesting projects, including the start of a historical impression to honor her Latina heritage (which she's recently blogged about, here: Latina Inspiration), and several, new punch paper acquisitions. If you're interested in learning more about punch paper, she teaches online and in-person classes, and has an instructional booklet with patterns from original pieces in her collection titled: Pierced, Punched, Perforated; 19th Century Perforated Paper Patterns.
For my current research, I'm focusing on several areas. The first is an extension of the research I did for an article on the Chinese soldiers of the American Civil War, and now looking into the early Chinese-American experience. Chinese immigration dates back the 1500s, and since the very beginnings, these people have faced the unspeakable - legalized discrimination, violence, enslavement, exploitation, exclusion, and expulsion from a country and culture they helped create. In just a few months reading, I've discovered so much about a forgotten people and past, I just know one of my life purposes is to help write them back into the narrative.
Another topic of interest is Orientalism, a complex, cross-cultural exchange, which particularly describes Western imitation of Eastern dress and design. This too could be a life-long study. There are dress scholars and entire literature for seemingly every aspect of orientalist fashion: from the fabrics and textiles themselves, to garments and accessories, and taste and transactions, be it for monetary profit or perceived social and political superiority. There's a whole history to address and undress (bad puns intended); and here are just a few of the books I've worked through, annotating in every margin and copiously applying color-coded sticky notes, of course:
For those who asked during the live chat, these are the books I mentioned:
- Freedom for Me: A Chinese Yankee by Stacie Haas
- Chinese Yankee by Ruthanne Lum McCunn
- Asians and Pacific Islanders and the Civil War, the Official National Park Service Handbook
- Fashion and Orientalism: Dress, Textiles and Culture from the 17th to the 21st Century by Adam Geczy
- The Victoria & Albert Museum's Textile Collection: Embroidery in Britain from 1200 to 1750 by Donald King & Santina Levey
As for my current sewing projects, I'm working on an 1860s dress for my senior thesis, as well as some summer clothes, inspired by vintage fashions. I picked up these Simplicity reprints during a sale, and might draft some shorts or wrap skirt of some sort to match:
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