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Date: | Fri, 8 May 1998 14:03:53 -0700 |
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Doug Lantry wrote:
>
> The argument is simple: Made things turn out the way they do because
> people who made them have attitudes, priorities, agendas, cultural
> outlooks, etc. In this way, the politics of homo faber are embedded in
> artifice. How could this kind of thing apply to military uniforms?
> Here's a shot in the dark: I'll bet regalia of different nations and
> military services look very different (and similar too) for reasons
> related to the wishes of their designers and users, and are not entirely
> dependent on the "form-function" question.
Do you mean to say that *cultural outlooks* or *attitudes* are the same thing
as *politics*? Seems a bit of a stretch to me; though I'm willing to bet
that politics *do* influence uniform design. . . .
--
Janis Wilkens
Registrar
Assistant to the Director for Planning & Special Projects
Museum of York County, 4621 Mount Gallant Road
Rock Hill, SC 29732-9905
803/329-2121 ext 122 Fax 803/329-5249
mailto:[log in to unmask]
http://web.cetlink.net/~myco/index.html
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