PROJECT 6
What does clothing reveal about a people, their land, and their history? In this episode, we explore Hawaiian fashion as a living archive of culture and identity. From ancient kapa cloth made from wauke bark, to plantation-era palaka, to the global rise of the aloha shirt, Hawaiian clothing tells stories of genealogy, labor, migration, resilience, and adaptation. We examine how garments once created for ceremony, survival, and community were reshaped through Western contact, missionary influence, and multicultural exchange—yet retained a distinctly Hawaiian sense of place and purpose. This episode also confronts modern questions of cultural appropriation, global fashion influence, and what responsibility comes with wearing designs rooted in Indigenous history. Hawaiian fashion is not just aesthetic. It is memory, meaning, and movement—worn on the body.
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