EU expansion a lesson for ASEAN: Lee Kuan Yew
During my trip to
I’d been to Harajuku before on previous trips to Tokyo, back when Gothic Lolita and Rockabilly were still widespread fashion statements and I was not in the position to ask my dad for shopping allowance to buy overpriced, outlandish clothes that would make me look even more like jail bait. I remember trudging open-mouthed beneath the arch that marked Takeshita-dori, utterly mesmerized and completely freaked out by the PVC and lace baby-doll dresses, towering platform shoes and platinum pomade hairdos that promenaded past me. These teens and twenty-somethings spurned by a culture that prides itself on principles of restraint totally blew my mind. I couldn’t help blatantly staring at the bizarre outfits, made even more conspicuous by the modest sashays and bowed heads they were partnered with. What these people held back in terms of demeanor, they overcompensated for in terms of personal style. My exposure to Harajuku style revealed a new way of looking at fashion — as a quiet means to rebel against the cookie-cutter norms of society without directly affecting anyone else — which I learned to adopt as a healthier means of blowing off steam during my formative years.
During my most recent homage to Harajuku, I noticed that Western fashion is making a more prominent impression on the subculture. Brands such as Bathing Ape and Vans fill up display windows and teenagers are dressed like
These days, punk rock, the Beatnik movement, ’80s revival fashion and ’90s Industrial Goth have emerged as dominant trends in Harajuku. However, fashion fiends have used their uninhibited sense of style to amplify these trends in a manner nothing short of genius. In the same way that Pop Art raised its eyebrows at elitist attitudes, Harajuku’s exaggerated take on Western culture calls for a closer look. While the beliefs that fueled these style movements may have been lost in translation, the Japanese use pure aesthetics in a way that borders on satirical. For such a reticent people, the way Harajuku kids dress certainly speaks volumes to keen observers. Yeah, Western culture seems to have permeated Harajuku’s signature style, but the
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