Hoop earrings as a form of cultural appropriation?
Along with hair
scrunchies, ripped jeans and body glitter, hoop earrings are, to many people,
simply a current fashion
trend. To others, however, they carry a lot more meaning, and one woman
has now called out hoop earrings as a form of cultural appropriation. Ruby Pivet is a Latina
writer who has suggested that hoop earrings should be seen in the same light as
bindis, braids and Native American headdresses. “Hoops exist across many minority groups as symbols of
resistance, strength and identity,” she wrote for Vice. “I was three
years old when my paternal grandparents visited Australia for the first time,
the gift of hoop earrings in tow. “Much
to my grandmother’s horror, my ears were un-pierced. During her visit, that
changed. I began to navigate the world as a first generation Australian of
mixed heritage, small gold hoops dangling from my earlobes.” In the UK, hoop
earrings certainly haven’t always been seen as particularly fashionable items -
who can forget Catherine Tate’s chavvy schoolgirl character Lauren, who was
always sporting large hoop earrings to accessorize her school uniform? But in
recent years, they’ve been given a new lease of life by edgy, young, stylish
women, many of whom are white. “In the grand scheme of things, hoop earrings
may seem insignificant,” Pivet says. “But seeing white women wearing them is
unnerving. White girls did not start the ‘trend’ of over-sized hoop earrings
and yet they’re the ones being praised for donning the ‘edgy’ style. “Meanwhile, women of colour who wear them
face racial stereotypes
or the assumption that they’re participating in a disposable trend.” She
explains how last month, Vogue decreed that wearing gold hoops with an up-do
was the ultimate summer pairing. The fashion bible said that the trend had been
started by a group of mainly white models too. “A style that links so heavily
with identity is not taken seriously until it is seen on a white woman,” Pivet
writes. She’s by no means the only one to feel this way. In March this year,
three Latina students sparked controversy when they painted a mural asking
white classmates to stop wearing hoops at their college near LA. “Because it’s cute and aesthetic
when they wear hoop earrings, but it’s ghetto and hard for us to be taken
seriously when black and brown bodies wear them,” one of the students
responsible for the writing, Alegria Martinez, wrote on her Instagram account.
“White girls, take off your hoops, stop calling yourself mami and start
respecting our existence.” But the mural was met with much confusion on the
part of white people. “Women of colour
from all walks of life and cultures have been wearing hoops long before white
models whose careers were born of nepotism wore them in Instagram posts,” Pivet
says. “It’s only a matter of time before
Latina style gets stale and hoops are declared over in favour of a new
accessory.”
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