The seventies witnessed the rising sexuality of black men and women and after the civil rights movement the black power movement began to set in with such slogans as “black is beautiful” and “black power” becoming signature slogans of the period. Afro fashion is just one of the many attractive aesthetics that African Americans have sported in recent decades. It was part of the all-naturale look, a societal counter against the racist notion that African hair was unwieldy and unattractive. Afro fashion came to counter traditional racial assertions regarding the black mystique. Afro fashion has its nay sayers, but no one can deny the enormous impact that African Americans have made when it comes to Afro fashion. African Americans have never have never had a full say in what they wore in history. Not since the zoot suits of the 1940s were African Americans able to make such an imprint in fashion history. Many men and women of African descent had sported Afro fashion in the name of cultural pride and a symbol of attaining the freedom they had always desired.
A site devoted to all things vintage and antique fashion from the ancient world until the 1990s. Topics include clothing and other accessories which had come to define fashion through the ages. This blog explores the history of fashion along with all kinds of subcultures that incorporates antique and vintage clothing in lifestyle and music.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Afro Fashion
Afro fashion has taken root since the late 1960s. It is no coincidence that with the civil right movement ushered in freedom for African Americans to imprint their own sense of style and culture on the American public. Thanks to the contribution of many African American trend setters, the Afro fashion has sifted through many mainstream cultures around the world. Whites and blacks can be seen sporting afro fashion today. Afro fashion was an expression of black liberation and dependence. Through slavery, post-reconstruction and the Jim Crow era, African Americans have never been able to make a full impact on American fashion and pop culture. Afro fashion was a sure sign of positivity when it came to African Americans being accepted into the mainstream.
The seventies witnessed the rising sexuality of black men and women and after the civil rights movement the black power movement began to set in with such slogans as “black is beautiful” and “black power” becoming signature slogans of the period. Afro fashion is just one of the many attractive aesthetics that African Americans have sported in recent decades. It was part of the all-naturale look, a societal counter against the racist notion that African hair was unwieldy and unattractive. Afro fashion came to counter traditional racial assertions regarding the black mystique. Afro fashion has its nay sayers, but no one can deny the enormous impact that African Americans have made when it comes to Afro fashion. African Americans have never have never had a full say in what they wore in history. Not since the zoot suits of the 1940s were African Americans able to make such an imprint in fashion history. Many men and women of African descent had sported Afro fashion in the name of cultural pride and a symbol of attaining the freedom they had always desired.
The seventies witnessed the rising sexuality of black men and women and after the civil rights movement the black power movement began to set in with such slogans as “black is beautiful” and “black power” becoming signature slogans of the period. Afro fashion is just one of the many attractive aesthetics that African Americans have sported in recent decades. It was part of the all-naturale look, a societal counter against the racist notion that African hair was unwieldy and unattractive. Afro fashion came to counter traditional racial assertions regarding the black mystique. Afro fashion has its nay sayers, but no one can deny the enormous impact that African Americans have made when it comes to Afro fashion. African Americans have never have never had a full say in what they wore in history. Not since the zoot suits of the 1940s were African Americans able to make such an imprint in fashion history. Many men and women of African descent had sported Afro fashion in the name of cultural pride and a symbol of attaining the freedom they had always desired.
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