Fall 2026 Anthropology BC3326 section 001

Fashion, Dress, and Cultural Futures in

Fashion in Oceania

Call Number 00872
Day & Time
Location
M 12:10pm-2:00pm
To be announced
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Paige West
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

This upper-level seminar examines fashion and dress as historical forces and contemporary practices in Oceania and the Pacific diaspora. Clothing is treated not as decoration, but as a domain where colonialism and missionization were enacted, where gender and class hierarchies are negotiated, where Indigenous political and cultural projects take material form, and where creative economies and transnational networks are built.

Students read ethnographic and historical scholarship that centers Pacific perspectives and interrogates how garments, materials, bodies, markets, institutions, and media shape everyday life. Topics include mission clothing and morality, gender and respectability, heritage and tradition, diaspora and migration, fashion platforms and mediation, hybridity and experimentation, intellectual property and Indigenous sovereignty, museums and cultural governance, ecological knowledge, and climate change.

Assignments emphasize analytical writing, discussion leadership, annotated bibliographies, object-based case studies, and a substantial final research project. Students develop skills in evidence-based argumentation, ethical interpretation across difference, and connecting local case studies to global processes without erasing Indigenous histories and lived experience.

Web Site Vergil
Department Anthropology @Barnard
Enrollment 0 students (15 max) as of 12:06PM Monday, March 9, 2026
Subject Anthropology
Number BC3326
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note ***INSTRUCTOR PERMISSION REQUIRED***
Section key 20263ANTH3326X001