A high school student who posted about her prom on Twitter, has become the centre of a huge debate regarding cultural appropriation.
The student, known as Keziah, can be seen in the photograph wearing a cheongsam, also known as a qipao, which is a traditional Chinese dress:
PROM pic.twitter.com/gsJ0LtsCmP
— Keziah (@daumkeziah) April 22, 2018
However Keziah is not Chinese and it appears a lot of the Twitter-world believe she’s wrong for wearing a dress which is not associated with her culture.
However, others are of the opinion you can wear whatever the hell you want.
One tweet which has gained a lot of attention was made by a guy known as Jeremy Lam, who tweeted:
My culture is not your goddamn prom dress.
My culture is NOT your goddamn prom dress. https://t.co/vhkNOPevKD
— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 27, 2018
The tweet has since received 168k likes, 39k retweets, and 13k replies at the time of writing.
However the argument is massively divided.
Unrelated Fun Fact (a thread):
The qipao was originally a loose dress/garment without shape, made for Chinese women to clean the house and do other domestic chores with.— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
It was then altered and embroidered as a beautiful form-fitting outfit to wear publically, which Chinese women were not allowed to do at during the times of extreme patriarchal oppression.
— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
In a time where Asian women were silenced they were able to create, not only a piece of art but a symbol of activism. This piece of clothing embraced femininity, confidence, and gender equality through its beautiful, eye-catching appearance.
— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
It even broke the division of financial classes! It could be made with high-quality materials that only the upper class could afford such as special silks and linens, but a dress just as beautiful could have been made with just cotton and low-quality linen.
— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
Femme factory workers wore this dress!!! And the style was then spread throughout Asian as a beautiful garment and sign of women's liberation.
— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
Jeremy posted a series of follow up tweets, which he summarised saying:
I’m proud of my culture, including the extreme barriers marginalised people within that culture have had to overcome those obstacles.
For it to simply be subject to American consumerism and cater to a white audience, is parallel to colonial ideology.
In short:
I'm proud of my culture, including the extreme barriers marginalized people within that culture have had to overcome those obstacles. For it to simply be subject to American consumerism and cater to a white audience, is parallel to colonial ideology.— Jeremy Lam (@jere_bare) April 28, 2018
Another Twitter user explained;
Just because it’s okay to a few Chinese people doesn’t mean it’s okay to all of us? our traditional dress isn’t meant to be a fashion statement or make you appear more “exotic”. there’s a long history behind the dress and white people are not a part of it. [sic]
Others however believe this has been blown way out of proportion and at the end of the day, ‘it’s just a dress’.
One tweeted:
This is literally not offensive. It’s not being used mockingly. People need to stop choosing to be offended by everything. Get over yourself.
This is literally not offensive. It’s not being used mockingly. People need to stop choosing to be offended by everything🙄 get over yourself.
— Niall⭐️ (@ENIGMAwhooop) April 28, 2018
The same Twitter user then followed up his argument when he was told to ‘stop telling POC (Person of Colour) what he’s allowed to be upset about’.
He replied:
You don’t have to be a poc to have a culture. Race and culture aren’t really connected at all. I’m Irish.
On our national day people go around in fake red beards and exaggerated clothing of what they think traditional clothing is here.
You don’t have to be a poc to have a culture. Race and culture aren’t really connected at all. I’m Irish. On our national day people go around in fake red beards and exaggerated clothing of what they think traditional clothing is here.
— Niall⭐️ (@ENIGMAwhooop) April 28, 2018
Another tweeted:
I’ve seen all kinds of people wearing jeans who have no cultural links with the American West. They just like the look.
I don’t have a problem with that. Do you?
I’ve seen all kinds of people wearing jeans who have no cultural links with the American West. They just like the look. I don’t have a problem with that. Do you?
— Paul A Davies (@ELTAuthor) April 29, 2018
Others have called out Jeremy’s clothes, which are typically western:
"My culture is not your prom dress" he said, while wearing an ADIDAS baseball cap, white T-shirt and douche-bro shorts, which I guess are totally indicative to and native of Chinese culture, I guess he's implying. pic.twitter.com/8hi4Xw6tCN
— Gary Laser Eyes (@GaryLazer_Eyes) April 29, 2018
Imagine if White People™ told that Asian guy: "Stop wearing our Levis Jeans. My culture is NOT your goddamn pants."
He'd be screaming racism.
What's funny is all the Likes and RT's he's getting. Virtue Signalling is real.
— Nick Flor-ProfessorF (@ProfessorF) April 29, 2018
Others called Jeremy a racist himself:
We love a closet racist pic.twitter.com/KqIzsBBMQA
— jake severe (@JacobSevere) April 29, 2018
@jere_bare can tweet the word “ nigga” but gets butt hurt when people wear traditional Chinese wear ??
— Joshua (@IamJoshuaK) April 29, 2018
One person argued nobody should wear another cultures traditional dress, writing:
This isn’t ok. I wouldn’t wear traditional Korean, Japanese or any other traditional dress and I’m Asian.
I wouldn’t wear traditional Irish or Swedish or Greek dress either. There’s a lot of history behind these clothes. Sad.
This isn’t ok. I wouldn’t wear traditional Korean, Japanese or any other traditional dress and I’m Asian. I wouldn’t wear traditional Irish or Swedish or Greek dress either. There’s a lot of history behind these clothes. Sad.
— Jeannie (@JeannieBeanie99) April 28, 2018
While another took the opposite side to the debate, writing:
You look gorgeous and the dress is stunning! What a wonderful world we live in where we can share culture and dress in special design and style from across the world representing the culture of Earth and the art of humanity.
You look gorgeous and the dress is stunning! What a wonderful world we live in where we can share culture and dress in special design and style from across the world representing the culture of Earth and the art of humanity. ❤️
— Jerris (@jboezoe) April 28, 2018
In the aftermath of the debate, Keziah herself responded, saying she would not take the picture down because she didn’t believe she had done anything wrong.
She wrote:
To everyone causing so much negativity: I mean no disrespect to the Chinese culture.
I’m simply showing my appreciation to their culture. I’m not deleting my post because I’ve done nothing but show my love for the culture. It’s a… dress. And it’s beautiful.
I don’t understand everyone’s need or desire to cause so much hate. I’m simply showing my love for a beautiful culture and there is nothing wrong with that. Keep talking shit. I don’t care. I have much respect for the Chinese culture ❤️
— Keziah (@daumkeziah) April 28, 2018
To everyone causing so much negativity: I mean no disrespect to the Chinese culture. I’m simply showing my appreciation to their culture. I’m not deleting my post because I’ve done nothing but show my love for the culture. It’s a fucking dress. And it’s beautiful.
— Keziah (@daumkeziah) April 28, 2018
To everyone who says I’m ignorant, I fully understand everyone’s concerns and views on my dress. I mean no harm. I am in no way being discriminative or racist. I’m tired of all the backlash and hate when my only intent was to show my love.
— Keziah (@daumkeziah) April 28, 2018
I love and appreciate diversity and other cultures. I mean no hate. I love everyone ❤️
— Keziah (@daumkeziah) April 29, 2018
What’s your opinion on the matter? Did Keziah do something wrong by wearing the traditional Chinese qipao to prom or not?
Let us know.
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