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6th August 10, 12:18 PM
#1
Kilting as cultural politico-economic subversion?
I've been giving a lot of thought lately as to why I'm so interested in kilts and Scottish culture in general, aside from the fact that place my ancestral roots there. I fully realize that heritage is reason enough for my interest but even still, knowing me there has to be another reason more core to myself and my personal philosophy.
The other day I came across an article where the author deconstructed Terry Zwigoff’s 2001 film Ghost World using Marxist thought and to a larger extent Situationist theory. The basis of Situationism was familiar to me but I enjoyed the new context placed within the film.
Today as I was reading various threads on here on X Marks concerning the history of the kilt and its place in modern culture the article sprang to mind again and I made a connection which answered my question of why I take such an active interest in wearing the kilt.
Kilting is, for me, given my geographical and cultural location of Utah in the United States, a subversive act designed to challenge the status quo. Wearing a kilt in a sea of p@nt$ sets me apart from the rest of society in a manner more authentic and significant than people who claim their individuality through expensive, inaccessible or rare but still mass-marketed avenues. My kilt provides me with a sense of authentic individuality based not only on the uniqueness of the garment but also on the genuine intellectual, cultural and historical interest I invest in it.
As a preface let me state in no uncertain terms that the wording used here about “dead” commodities and things no longer being produced should be taken within the context of the original article and not misconstrued with regards to the tartan industry today. In making my point it is enough, I hope, to clarify that p@nt$ vastly outnumber kilts from the global consumerist stance but that they are by no means an inferior garment (obviously!) with any less modern significance or importance to any other piece of clothing.
The following is an abridged and slightly edited version of the pertinent points made in the article which can be read in its entirety here.
To begin, there are three basic categories of goods:
Basic Necessities: Things we need to survive on a reasonable level of well being that aren’t advertised as specific commodities: food and drink, non-name-brand clothes and shoes, electricity, heat, shelter, basic forms of communication, etc etc.
Living Commodities: Mass-produced and mass-marketed commodities advertised as specific products rather than as generic goods competing for the lowest price: Nike sneakers, Britney Spears CDs, Calvin Klein jeans, Apple iPods, etc etc. They are what drive the modern consumer economy.
Dead Commodities: Things one can buy second-hand but that are no longer mass-produced or the subject of mass-marketing campaigns (though they might be advertised in specialized and niche publications such as community newspapers or fan magazines). They once were living fetishes, but are now in their retail graves: records and 8-track tapes, retro used clothes, old books and comics, unfinished antique furniture, and black-and-white televisions.
As with basic necessities, the mass media spend little or no time colonizing our inner lives to convince us to buy dead commodities for the simple reason that they’re no longer mass produced and therefore large corporations, which control mass-media advertising, make no profit from their sale.
Generally speaking, dead commodities are no longer consider “cool” or “hip” except in subcultures with limited memberships. They can be symbolically re-possessed by specific subcultures to aid in their self-definition. Yet without campaigns of mass production and mass marketing backing them up, the consumption of dead commodities does little damage to one’s individuality or authenticity. The strongest conformity they call for is to the limited subcultures mentioned above, with their obscure niche markets. Certainly a collector of such commodities can become a fetishist. Yet such a collector can also have a genuine intellectual or historical interest in the commodities they collect. The buying of dead commodities doesn’t logically imply either mass conformity or a lack of authenticity, though both depend on the buyer, the commodity itself, and the way it is used. Obsession is still obsession, even if it involves 8-tracks. Generally speaking, the older the commodity, the greater the sense of individuality it can generate: so 78 rpm records are more “individual” than cassettes, 40s fedoras than 80s white sports jackets, 20s delta blues than 70s punk rock.
The more individual the dead commodity, the less it strips its user of authenticity. For Hedonists to equate an SUV to a collection of old folk records in terms of authenticity is absurd: walk around any suburban parking lot and ask everyone getting out of their SUVs and minivans who Ewan MacColl is if you want to prove this point. Since all commodities are potentially available to all consumers, the number of people who actually consume a given commodity is directly linked (contra Hedonists like Heath and Potter) to the degree of individuality that the commodity affords its consumer. If I’m the only person who treasures commodity X, then by definition I am very individual. And if I have good reasons for treasuring X, and am sincere, then I can also be seen as authentic (at least in this regard).
Dead commodities have a history, while living commodities exist in an eternal present. Commodity fetishism in its purest form applies to the buying of living commodities. Thus the consumption of mass-marketed living commodities does the greatest damage to any sense of personal authenticity.
There’s much more to be said but this is long enough as it is. In any case, in reading this and making the connection to modern kilting with an historical context I realize that the kilt is, at least in the States and I’m sure to a certain degree in the UK as well, a badge of genuine individuality as well as an instrument of refusing the alienation endemic in our modern society which stems from mass-produced, disposable and in the end culturally insignificant consumer goods and replacing it with a connection to hundreds of years of tradition and rich culture. That in itself is inherently subversive to a consumer culture which stresses the here-and-now above all else.
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6th August 10, 12:53 PM
#2
Originally Posted by vegan_scot
There’s much more to be said but this is long enough as it is. In any case, in reading this and making the connection to modern kilting with an historical context I realize that the kilt is, at least in the States and I’m sure to a certain degree in the UK as well, a badge of genuine individuality as well as an instrument of refusing the alienation endemic in our modern society which stems from mass-produced, disposable and in the end culturally insignificant consumer goods and replacing it with a connection to hundreds of years of tradition and rich culture. That in itself is inherently subversive to a consumer culture which stresses the here-and-now above all else.
That, and it lets your breath.
JK.
Your post raises some interesting points, and to be sure, some DO wear the kilt to buck the 'consumer goods-machine'. More, I'm sure, do it to connect to and express their heritage.
The question of 'modern' kilts though? were do they lie on the spectrum? Especially Utilikilts, which is trying to be the Levis of modern kilting. How about the mass produced PV and acrylics coming out of Pakistan or Scotland? (by this I mean 8 tartans, 24" length only, sz 28"-52")
I happen to have two OTR kilts, one in a common tartan, one not. I'm also not Scottish (though I DO potentially have some VERY distant cousins).
While it's true that I'm swimming upstream VS p@nts-people, I am still wearing something mass produced (in Scotland). It also has no cultural tie to me. I might just like not having to wear pants
Certainly, some of our board members have fetishized the buying and wearing of kilts, to the point where they are their own consumer force in a fairly small market
Also, as the kilting community grows, in real space or cyberspace, does the finding of comrades with similar interests and opinions mellow and eventually negate the "one man against the masses"?
Cool post, I'd love to hear other's thoughts on the matter.
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6th August 10, 01:39 PM
#3
Fascinating Thomas. Certainly works for me. I've just learned something about myself too! I gave up on new things years back. I buy used cars (some might say antique), some of my Highland wear clothing is from the eBay vintage stall, all my furniture is antique; in fact, I'm getting a bit antique myself. I'm not sure I'd call all those things "dead" though, because then I'd have to include myself in that category, and I'm not so tired, even on a Friday, to say my own last rites.
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6th August 10, 01:46 PM
#4
Funny, as a child in London after the War, men wore dark suits, bowlers, and carried umbrellas. Cars were black. Young boys wore grey corduroy shorts and grey airtex shirts. I think girls wore pinnafores, and we all wore sandals over our long (grey) wool socks. I didn't worry about individualism then. I don't really seek it now, more like I'm an eccentric cog that spun out of orbit along the way. The deeper question is if we truly are individual, then why do we care about the trappings (surrounding ourselves with 'dead' things) as decoration of our individuation? Feels a bit like we may have fallen out of touch with that true source of individuation, that inner light, what have you.
Haven't worn a kilt in months. It's too hot, and I gave my casual kilt to my son! Now I am wondering, like someone else recently, how to get back on the horse (or whether to get back on the horse).
Thanks for taking the time to type that all into your post. Interesting.
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6th August 10, 02:00 PM
#5
I guess the question for me in anticipating the arrival of my first kilt was, 'how far apart from the consumerist norm am I willing to stand'? Since I am perfectly comfortable in a kilt in all of the circumstances I have so far trod it out, the answer must be at least, 'far enough'.
Along with expression of cultural pride, I too see it as a subversive act against the tyranny of trews. The cultural diversity here makes it easier. The few Europeans who take a second look at me while kilted are probably thinking, "I wonder what clan that is" and the Asians might be thinking, "Why is that white guy wearing that odd patterned sarong"?
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6th August 10, 02:20 PM
#6
That's something I hadn't considered Artificer. I think there probably exists a space between "dead" and "living" commodities which PV and modern kilts would fall into. Of course they are still in stark contrast to today's usual bifurcated garments but as you point out they may not be considered to be in total opposition to mass-production. However, as they still don't fall under the purview of mass-marketing and are still a specialty item without as much general demand. I would say that they fall short of the definition of "living commodity."
And yes Mark, I definitely think that there's a deficit of being in touch with the "true source" of individuality, even (and sometimes especially) within subcultures which supposedly espouse opposition to the status quo. This is usually, in my experience, the result of larger forces co-opting existing underground trends, movements, etc in an attempt to "cool" their own brand. (Corporations adding the word "green" to their products for example.)
I feel that as people become more disenchanted with the disingenuous inauthenticity of the lives which corporations provide them with they will naturally, unconsciously gravitate towards things which have less market value and more intrinsic personal value and in turn these things will become less external ornamentation and more internal identity.
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6th August 10, 02:35 PM
#7
Originally Posted by vegan_scot
That's something I hadn't considered Artificer. I think there probably exists a space between "dead" and "living" commodities which PV and modern kilts would fall into. Of course they are still in stark contrast to today's usual bifurcated garments but as you point out they may not be considered to be in total opposition to mass-production. However, as they still don't fall under the purview of mass-marketing and are still a specialty item without as much general demand. I would say that they fall short of the definition of "living commodity."
Perhaps, then, they are. . .Undead.
"It's all the same to me, war or peace,
I'm killed in the war or hung during peace."
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6th August 10, 03:06 PM
#8
Originally Posted by vegan_scot
In reading this and making the connection to modern kilting with an historical context I realize that the kilt is, at least in the States and I’m sure to a certain degree in the UK as well, a badge of genuine individuality as well as an instrument of refusing the alienation endemic in our modern society which stems from mass-produced, disposable and in the end culturally insignificant consumer goods and replacing it with a connection to hundreds of years of tradition and rich culture. That in itself is inherently subversive to a consumer culture which stresses the here-and-now above all else.
This is all you had to say to make your point, really! Sums the whole thing - and my own personal attitude- up quite nicely!
"Two things are infinite- the universe, and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." Albert Einstein.
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6th August 10, 03:21 PM
#9
Originally Posted by Nighthawk
This is all you had to say to make your point, really! Sums the whole thing - and my own personal attitude- up quite nicely!
Brevity is the soul of wit? Naaaaah...
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6th August 10, 03:33 PM
#10
Perhaps this is a good time to offer up Occam's Razor for consideration. I just like kilts.
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