Martini Enfield
11-17-2011, 04:15 AM
Western as in "Western Hemisphere", not as in "Cowboys & Indians", of course.
I was watching BBC News today and they were covering a story in one of the Middle Eastern countries which involved an assembly of people, and nearly all the men (Middle Eastern) were wearing Western suits and ties. And I found myself thinking: Why are people in this country wearing a suit and tie, something completely not appropriate for wearing in the desert or the tropics?
There was another piece about the Japanese Diet, and again everyone was wearing a suit. The Minister for Something Or Other in a South American country? Suit. Greek Economist? Suit. Chinese Building Developer? Suit.
Which got me wondering: How is it that Western clothing became the "default" for businesswear all over the world? There's got to be some reason that people in Japan don't generally wear Kimonos to work these days, for example.
I know that in some places they've combined Western dress with traditional dress (a number of the Pacific Islands, for example), but the point seems to be that a shirt, tie, and maybe suit jacket seems to be the international standard for business or government wear... So how did this come to be? I imagine some of it's a legacy of Imperialism, but there's got to be more to it than that...
I was watching BBC News today and they were covering a story in one of the Middle Eastern countries which involved an assembly of people, and nearly all the men (Middle Eastern) were wearing Western suits and ties. And I found myself thinking: Why are people in this country wearing a suit and tie, something completely not appropriate for wearing in the desert or the tropics?
There was another piece about the Japanese Diet, and again everyone was wearing a suit. The Minister for Something Or Other in a South American country? Suit. Greek Economist? Suit. Chinese Building Developer? Suit.
Which got me wondering: How is it that Western clothing became the "default" for businesswear all over the world? There's got to be some reason that people in Japan don't generally wear Kimonos to work these days, for example.
I know that in some places they've combined Western dress with traditional dress (a number of the Pacific Islands, for example), but the point seems to be that a shirt, tie, and maybe suit jacket seems to be the international standard for business or government wear... So how did this come to be? I imagine some of it's a legacy of Imperialism, but there's got to be more to it than that...