In this article, I analyse teacher's attire as a political phenomenon in the context of the Mari people, a Finno-Ugric minority living in Central Russia. The material for this study is based on observations and interviews made by the author during 1987-2019 in different places of the Mari region. The Mari teacher's dress code, a dark dress with a white collar, is usually considered self-evident, but as I argue in this article, in the Soviet Union, and in Russia at the post-socialist time, the Mari female teacher's dress served two practices. Firstly, clothing represented position and agency of power, the socialist ideal, and later the political trend of the majority. Secondly, clothing represented traditional, everyday Mari life.
CITATION STYLE
Lehtinen, I. (2021). Behind the Scenes. Ethnologia Fennica, 48(2), 5–40. https://doi.org/10.23991/EF.V48I2.103024
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