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Six Things One Should Know About Dressed Dogs
I've ended up on some weird mailing lists in my time but this email (below) tops them all. It's from an email series called PicturePeople which, from what I gather, consists of found photographs and text. And that's really all I have to say about it.
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Six Things One Should Know About Dressed Dogs
1. dog dress is a form of communication. It carries nonverbal messages to its audience com-posed of peers and other species that are inaccessible to their human companions.
2. dog dress represents dog values of identity with a particular peer or species group, and at the same time expresses a need to be different from other dogs and species (i.e. cats, parakeets, rats, etc.)
3. dog dress differences symbolize a need for autonomy. Dogs, not their owners, strive for independence.
4. dog dress as different from human dress is a relatively recent historical phenomenon. Pre-vious to the 1950's the dress of dogs mimicked human fashions.
5. dog dress of the present appears to have a historical connection with the dog clothing of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Fashions styles manifest a cyclical nature. What is new and apparently original dress to one generation has its derivation in the past (though there were times when dogs were not dressed at all!).
6. dog dress of the present is influenced by the media. The recent development of animal food commercials demonstrates the powerful effect clothing of animal film stars has on dog audiences.
Remember that clothing is a language, a nonverbal system of communication that through its symbols conveys much about the wearer to the viewer. Before dogs bark at one another, their clothing makes a statement that expresses their sex, age, class, occupation, origin and personality, as well as what they are or what they want to be at a particular moment. Consult Donna Haraway's Companion Species Manifesto (Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2003) for further information.
Posted by Carrie McLaren on 10/19/2005 | Permalink
Comments
At the risk of sounding like an ass with no sense of humor -- some small dogs actually need to wear clothes. Little dogs don't generate enough body heat to keep them warm in below 50 degree weather and are at risk of hypothermia. My vet recommends my little guy wear clothes all winter. So of course I make sure the clothes are as ridiculous as they can possibly be, because I can...
Posted by: Steph Mineart | Nov 8, 2005 3:17:33 PM






