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Everything You Ever Wanted To Know - And Less - About Syrian Underwe

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  • Everything You Ever Wanted To Know - And Less - About Syrian Underwe

    EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW - AND LESS - ABOUT SYRIAN UNDERWEAR
    By Anna Sussman

    Daily Star
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_i d=1&categ_id=4&article_id=99231
    Feb 11 2009
    Lebanon

    'The Secret Life of Syrian Lingerie' explores a known but nebulous
    subculture

    BEIRUT: Visitors to the Middle East are often drawn by Orientalist
    fantasies of colorful, fragrant souks, veiled women navigating spice
    bazaars and narrow alleyways. I was, at least, when I signed up to
    study abroad in Morocco, seven years ago. What I had expected - mounds
    of dates and embroidered leather slippers - was there in abundance,
    and in abundance I shopped. There was also something unexpected:
    stall after stall of the sleaziest underwear I'd ever seen.

    For years after, the thought of doing a story about smarmy lingerie
    ricocheted around in my head, but I never managed to deepen my analysis
    past "veiled outside, sexy inside," a simplistic reduction that said
    more about my ignorance than about the dynamic I would be attempting
    to describe.

    So I was intrigued when I heard of "The Secret Life of Syrian
    Lingerie," the recent book by Malu Halasa and Rana Salam. The subject
    of a whole book, I wondered? What all is there to say?

    As Halasa writes in her opening essay "Competing Thongs: The Lingerie
    Culture of Syria," this lingerie "embodies both fantasy and frustration
    ... reveal[ing] much about the changing sexual mores of the modern
    Middle East."

    Halasa and Salam should be commended, first of all, for seeking to
    go beyond the simple conservative/trashy dichotomy that immediately
    presents itself, although it is a recurrent theme. They do this by
    treating the book as a "curated space," as Halasa put it, filling it
    with a number of contributions from artists and writers: photo essays,
    interviews, first-person texts, poetry and reportage. As in any group
    show, some pieces are decidedly better than others, although it must
    be said that they have found an impressive array of perspectives on
    what could be considered a niche topic.

    The esoteric theme was originally intended to be the subject of an
    essay by Salam in "Transit Beirut," a 2004 collection of essays and
    fiction writing edited by Halasa and Roseanne Khalaf, but Halasa
    had bigger plans. They approached the head of the Prince Claus Fund
    Library, inviting her to a "very swishy, colonial hotel" where Halasa
    whipped out a giant bag of Syrian underwear. Laying the pieces out
    on the table, no doubt to the horror of the hotel's patrons, they
    got the funding.

    Salam, a celebrated graphic designer who grew up in Beirut but
    went to Central St. Martin's in London for college, was always
    attracted to the underwear, which she used to pick up as gag gifts
    for friends. She realized she was onto something by her friends'
    reactions: "They would go crazy over them," she said. For her, this
    book was a way of "capturing what is disregarded, giving it value,
    glamorizing it." In this sense, it is an extension of her larger body
    of work, which takes everyday items such as colorful Chiclets boxes,
    and gives them the quasi-Warhol treatment.

    Halasa's essay begins by providing a magnificent overview on the
    topic. She takes the reader from the souk stalls, where vendors keep
    their "catalogues," cheap photo albums filled with pictures of Eastern
    European women modeling the various available styles, to the factory
    floors, and into the home of one of the photographers who snaps
    the rather artless shots for the catalogues. She touches on gender
    relations, the role of lingerie in keeping husbands faithful ("As long
    as you get everything at home, you don't get sidetracked and go to
    prostitutes," one such husband tells them), and the politics of pretty
    panties (after the October War in 1973, Gulf countries began investing
    in Syria, stimulating the circulation of luxury items like lingerie.)

    In focusing on the politics and economics of lingerie production,
    Halasa winds up with a refreshingly original approach to the
    topic. She reads Syrian history into bra fashions, recounting how
    "border closures, corruption, and scarcity of modern materials and
    machinery" meant that bras were not manufactured in Syria until the
    1970s. Thong underwear with chirping birds and screeching cellphones
    symbolize globalization and entrepreneurship to her; the inventive
    use of Chinese audio chips to bring some aural flair into the bedroom.

    But as Halasa herself admits, focusing on production left her entirely
    in the hands of men. The lingerie is sold by men, almost always
    designed by men, and photographed by men, often to the detriment of
    the women who wear it (although it is a female designer who at one
    point proffers a new style made of burlap, a questionable fabric
    choice for intimate wear.) She realized as she left Syria in 2005,
    after spending a month there researching the book, that she had very
    few women's perspectives on the topic, something that Chronicle,
    her publisher, later asked her to correct.

    Some insight into women's lives and thoughts is provided by Noura
    Kevorkian, an Aleppo-born filmmaker who set out to make a documentary
    about "Syrian lingerie and the women who wear it."

    Kevorkian, who grew up in Lebanon, Syria, and Canada, kept a diary
    during her filming, and like a lot of diaries, this one features
    some pretty bad writing. For example: "I grew up Christian in the
    Middle East. These women [presumably she is referring to Muslims]
    were my neighbors. Yet a number of contradictions about their lives
    perplex me, and I am determined to find out their meaning."

    Despite her us-them positioning, she does manage to befriend a family,
    going often to the house of Umm Fathi, a fully covered mother of
    nine. Umm Fathi's sister Muna has internalized the prevailing wisdom
    on marital relations, telling Kevorkian "If you were married, you
    would know that if you don't keep your husband happy in the bedroom,
    he would go out - whores, mistresses, and worst of all, he could
    marry a second wife."

    Her essay is given a lift by the photography of Issa Touma, an
    Armenian artist based in Aleppo who also runs its most controversial
    gallery. The black-and-white images of Aleppan street scenes and women,
    taken by someone deeply rooted in the city, counter her strongly
    "outsider" perspective.

    Kevorkian's essay is followed by an interview with the dissident
    author and democracy activist Ammar Abdulhamid, whose first novel,
    "Menstruation," deals with a young Islamist who can smell women's
    menstrual blood. It is one of the highlights of the book, with Halasa
    asking thoughtful, pointed questions that provoke equally thoughtful
    replies, which add up to a comprehensive briefing on gender relations
    in Syria. He and his wife now live in the US, where he is a fellow
    at the Brookings Institution. To no one's surprise, he dismisses
    Victoria's Secret, one of his wife's favorites, as "lame." Back in
    Syria, he says, there "is simply much, much more."

    The book closes with several photo essays. The first, "Up Close:
    Intimate Still Lifes" by Gilbert Hage, is accompanied by women's
    insights excerpted from interviews done by the photographer and
    activist Eugenie Dolberg. While brief and often superficial, they
    represent a range of views on the topic, and the mix of different
    voices with endless shots of these intimate absurdities shunts the
    reader back and forth between sexual fantasyland and the actual
    thoughts and ideas of Syrian women. The photographs are simply
    terrific: Hage sets each piece or set on a plain, brightly colored
    background, letting them speak for themselves.

    By contrast, "Modeling Lingerie: Product Photography from Lingerie
    Manufacturers" puts the underwear back onto the female form. These
    product shots almost always feature Eastern European models, who
    find the work and pay more pleasant than their usual jobs, often
    as bar hostesses. Between the banal backdrops and the models' dour
    expressions, it is clear that, as Halasa points out, "These photos
    are not designed to titillate." Instead, they are designed to show
    the product, fluorescent lighting and cellulite be damned.

    The variety of ways in which Halasa and Salam have explored the topic
    of Syrian underwear is an achievement in itself. At times, however,
    it feels like a weakness, as though some elements, like the last
    essay "Coda: A Room of One's Own," were thrown in just because they
    vaguely related to the theme. "Coda," described as "self-portraiture
    and poetry" by Iman Ibrahim, looks like a series of stills from some
    kind of ImanCam, that she keeps trained on her bed all the time as
    she writhes around in her sheets and plays with lightbulbs. I found
    the poetry that captioned the photos far more thought-provoking
    and open-ended.

    Halasa, who also recently completed two other books with the help of
    Prince Claus Fund, "Transit Tehran" and another book on the Iranian
    photographer Kaveh Golestan, wants to take a bit of a break. Are there
    any other similar topics that Salam has in mind for a book? The secret
    life of Egyptian socks, for example?

    No, she said. "Nothing beats this topic."
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