Clothing the colony : nineteenth-century Philippine sartorial culture, 1820-1896 / Stephanie Coo
Material type:
- 9789715508919
- GT 1540 .C66 2019

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Annex Filipiniana | General Education | FIL GT 1540 .C66 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.1 | Available | NULIB000019216 |
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FIL GR 325 .P53 2016 Philippine folk literature : the proverbs / | FIL GR 325 .P53 2018 Philippine folk literature : the myths / | FIL GR 325 .Y37 2023 c.1 Ang Bisa ng pag-uulit sa katutubong panitikan / | FIL GT 1540 .C66 2019 Clothing the colony : nineteenth-century Philippine sartorial culture, 1820-1896 / | FIL GT 90 .M85 2016 Life in the Philippines : contextual essays on Filipino / | FIL GV 885.8.P6 .A43 2013 c.1 When we were champions : Borck, Loyzaga, Jaworski and the years of glory of Philippine Basketball / | FIL GV 885.8.P6 .A43 2013 c.2 When we were champions : Borck, Loyzaga, Jaworski and the years of glory of Philippine Basketball / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Chapter 1. The Colonial Context -- Chapter 2. The production of clothing -- Chapter 3. Evolution and meaning of lowland, christianized women's clothing -- Chapter 4. Lowland, Christianized men's clothing at a time of waning and emerging powers -- Chapter 5. Balancing pomp and pageantry with modestry and propriety -- Chapter 6. Clothing of Europeans and chinese in the colony -- Conclusion.
This book is, to date, the most comprehensive and rigorously-researched study on the forms of dress worn by almost all types and classes of inhabitants of the Philippines under Spain from 1820 to 1896. Using an interdisciplinary approach, it systematically and perspicaciously shows the inextricable links between these attires and the rapidly changing economic, political, religious, and social conditions of the nineteenth century, which, among others, witnessed the opening of the islands to international trade, the consequent rise of a mestizo elite, and the formation of groups of Filipinos who would eventually assert their identity through the ideology of reform, and later, revolution at century’s end.
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