Children’s Clothing in a Picture: Explorations of Photography, Childhood and Children’s Fashions in Early 20th Century Greece and Its US Diaspora
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework(s) and Methodology
3. Historical Background
4. History of Photography
5. Recording Changes in Children’s Clothing in Greece and in the Greek Diaspora in the US
5.1. Clothes for Children
5.2. Engendering Clothing for Children and Toddlers
5.3. Growing Consumerism and the Children’s Niche
6. Identifying Continuities in Sartorial Practices and Dress Codes for Children
6.1. Dress for the Occasion, Dress with Your Sunday Best
6.2. We Will Have to Make Do: Resourcefulness and Strategies to Overcome Scarcity Regarding Children’s Clothing
6.3. Agency, Identity and Familial Gaze
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Greek Villages | Greek Diaspora in US | |
---|---|---|
Photos taken in | 26 | 36 |
In a studio | 2 | 13 |
People posing for the camera | 20 | 18 |
Snapshot/Amateur | 6 | 18 |
Children only (no adults) | 6 | 11 |
1 | There are numerous such “funny stories” shared among locals, referring both to the pre-WWII and post WWII dispatch of parcels with aid (food, clothing etc.) amassed by individual migrants originating from Kremasti or by different Greek patriotic organizations. The author’s father frequently shared one such funny story, where an excessive number of men’s ties were deemed unnecessary by the villagers, who then decided to use those ties to tie their goats. |
2 | Other sources attesting the sending of clothing, textiles and shoes include private family correspondence as well as official Kremasti community transcripts (where remittances are also recorded). |
3 | One of the first theoretical works on fashion is (Barthes 1960). |
4 | Among the most recent studies are (Kawamura 2005; Johnson et al. 2003; Lynch and Strauss 2007). By no means is this list exhaustive, nor is a full catalogue of recent research within the scope of the present work. |
5 | Cook also points at the ways in which fashion history of children’s dress presents presumptions of children as biologically determined and thus creating an image of “a singular universal child” that is “dressed” (in a passive manner). |
6 | (Ibid, p. 10). Though some of Cook’s suggestions are adapted in this work, his emphasis on children as recognized social actors in terms of their dressing and dress-related consumption habits appears problematic, or at least cross-culturally debatable. What is described as “ambiguity” extends-for this work-to the methodological and conceptual pitfall of seeking the children’s voice as the main interpretive discourse for what children wore in the past and how they conceptualized themselves, their appearance, their relation to adults etc, yet talking to them (about their past) when the envisioned/portrayed/photographed children are no longer children. |
7 | Studies on children’s dress and fashion in Greece mostly emanate from folklore studies and usually refer to what were the “traditional costumes” of certain ethnic groups or rural or island communities around Greece. Of special interest and in a dialogue with history and literature are the works of (Bada 1991). Also of interest, again from the field of folklore studies (Vreli-Zachou 1990). |
8 | Works discussing the role and history of fashion in the US come from various disciplines. Here, I mostly rely on cultural studies and fashion history. Such works include, (Sheumaker and Wajda 2008; Eldridge 2008; Ewing 1984) and focusing on children only is (Worrell 1980; Thomas Cook 2004; as well as Bates 1997). On children’s fashion in general, (Brooke 2003; Vänskä 2017; Rose 2011, pp. 105–20; Brun Petersen 2020; Higonnet and Albinson 1997; Huun and Kaiser 2001; Thomas Cook 2011). |
9 | In this regard Philippe Ariès supported the idea that in the Middle Ages children were not a recognized social category and that such recognition occurred in the 16th century. His ideas were highly influential and (eventually) equally criticized (Ariès [1973] 2014). |
10 | For current research and future perspectives on the studies of childhood, it is worth-mentioning the collective work of Spyrou et al. (2019). |
11 | Historical studies that focus on children and childhood as a lived experience include the works of Frost (2008), of Zucchi (1998), of (Cunningham ([1995] 2021), and many others. A full list of history works focusing on children is beyond the scope of this work. Also of historical significance, yet focusing also on psychology and pedagogy is the work of Koops and Zuckerman (2003) and on the changing content and experiencing of emotions in Stearns and Haggerty (1991). Historical studies on children in labor and/or in poverty include (Henderson and Wall 1994; Davin 1996) and many more. Studies on children’s history in non-urban settings include (Rudolph 1995). Recent works that have centered on children with a multi-disciplinary approach include (Baxter and Ellis 2018; Duane 2013; Sánchez-Eppler 2005; and Spyrou et al. 2019). |
12 | To name some of the most important works in these fields, these include (Meraklis 1999). In the same volume, (Avdikos 1999). Also of Avdikos (1996). Also important are the works of Bada-Tsomokou (1993b), and Bada (2008). Also, Makrynioti (2003a, 2003b). |
13 | By no means is this an extensive or exhaustive reference to the different and multiple theoretical contexts surrounding photography, nor is this within the scope or intention of this work. |
14 | “Die Photographie” was first published in the Frankfurter Zeitung, 28 October 1927 where Krakauer served as one of the editors. |
15 | Walter Benjamin’s most important works on photography were published in 1931 (Benjamin 1931, initially published in Literarische Welt of 18.9., 25.9. and 2.10.1931) and 1936 (Benjamin [1936] 2008). Some of his ideas were thought as provocative in that era. |
16 | The most recent work being that of Elizabeth Edwards aiming at familiarizing historians with the world and language of photography (Edwards 2022). |
17 | According to Penelope Petsini, the first theoretical texts on photography were of Kostis Antoniadis (1987, 1994) and of Nikos Panagiotopoulos (1978, 1979, 1982, 1986, 1987). Antoniadis had studied photography in Paris and identified with the school of semiology. Panagiotopoulos had studied photography in London under Victor Burgin and mostly identified as post-structuralist and Marxist. Also significant are the works of Platon Rivellis (Petsini 2007). |
18 | Stathatos and Petsini (2021), Papaioannou and Areti (2013), and Drogkaris (2008) focusing on the ‘micro-history’ of a Laconian photographer, (Karali 2012; Rivellis 1991, 1993, 2000; Skarpelos 2011). The most recent work, discussing photographs taken in Sfakia, Crete, is that of Kalantzis (2019). |
19 | Harper explains that “Photo elicitation is based on the simple idea of inserting a photograph into a research interview” (Harper 2002). In this work, discussion with people who have preserved photos as part of their own family history has been integral in the analysis, for the cases of Kremasti and Crete. |
20 | Kuhn explains “memory work” in the following way; “Memory work has a great deal in common with forms of inquiry which-like detective work and archaeology, say-involve working backwards-searching for clues, deciphering signs and traces, making deductions, patching together reconstructions out of fragments of evidence” and continues by adding that “Memory work makes it possible to explore connections between ‘public’ historical events, structures of feeling, family dramas, relations of class, national identity and gender, and personal memory...Memory work can create new understandings of both past and present, while yet refusing a nostalgia that embalms the past in a perfect, irretrievable moment”. She then offers specific steps for applying this method (Kuhn [1995] 2002). |
21 | Annette Kuhn describes how studies of cultural memory “draw on, mix and match a range of methods of inquiry-sociological, ethnographic, literary-so that a sort of unselfconscious methodological bricolage, pragmatic and in varying degrees inventive and productive prevails in work in the field” (Kuhn 2007, p. 283). |
22 | The actual name of the place is used as it has been used in previous works by the author. |
23 | The names of the villages in Crete and in Kythera are not used for purposes of anonymity. |
24 | For example Laconia experienced Ottoman rule while Kythera was under British rule and Crete under Venetianand then Ottoman rule. |
25 | Kythera is an island, Crete is Greece’s biggest island and Laconia is partly coastal partly mountainous in the mainland. |
26 | For example a strong gender-specific moral code was observed in Laconia and Crete. |
27 | Also owned by the author. |
28 | Some photographs have been framed by their original owners and due to temporal distance, it is impossible to remove them from the frame without destroying them. Other photographs have survived only digitally, with technical details usually encountered at the back of the photo, lost forever. Other photographs have been ‘modified’ by the initial owners, mostly using collage techniques much later (in the 1960s) or (in most cases) by sticking cardboard paper at the back of the photo, as an affordable way to “protect” them from crinkling and hand them on the wall without having to procure glass frames. Information is included when photographic details are visible or traceable. |
29 | Works on Greek history of the time in general include, among many others, (Hadjiiosif 2009; Dertilis 2006; Kostis 2013). |
30 | For example Crete that is discussed in this work was united with Greece after the 1913 Treaty of London. The islands of the Dodecanese were under Italian rule until the 7th of March 1948. After the Balkan wars, Salonica (in 1912) and Western Thrace (in the Treaty of Neuilly, 1920) were united with Greece. |
31 | After internal political and strategic division, Greece joined the war in June 1917. |
32 | The role of Greece in WWI and the disillusioning aspirations of Greece but also the catastrophic aftermaths of the Asia Minor expedition are discussed in various works, like (Smith [1973] 2009) and (Hirschon 1989). |
33 | The Bank of Greece was established in 1927 while the Agricultural Bank of Greece-in a country predominantly agricultural-was established in 1929. Until then the monopoly of banking services was exclusive to the National Bank of Greece. Such lacuna explains perhaps the extensive networks of usury and the longevity of feudal structures and customs in certain parts of the country. For more on the economic history of Greece at the time, see (Fragkiadis 2007; also Mazower 2009; Petmezas 2003). |
34 | Aliki Tsirgialou discusses the expansion of the new medium with the arrival of Kodak in Greece in (Tsirgialou 2021). Alkis Xanthakis mentioned that in the mid-1920s a translation of the Kodak book “Stihia Fotografikis” (Elements of Photography), was translated into Greek with information for amateur photographers. In April 1928 the first Greek journal on photography, entitled Fotografikon Deltion, was established, soon to be followed by the second magazine on photography entitled Fakos (Lens), by Manolis Megalokonomou. In (Xanthakis 2008, p. 341). |
35 | For example Panos Eliopoulos, the child of a very poor peasant family from Messinia, Peloponnese who migrated illegally to the US (Detroit), got his photographic training in Chicago and returned to open his studio in Messinia. Similar is the story of Argolis-born Yannis Karamanos, who also migrated to the US (Oregon), returned to fight in the Balkan wars and launched his photographic profession in 1916, along with his agricultural chores in a small village of Argolida (Peloponnese). In (Liontis 2013, p. 60). |
36 | A very interesting overview of Kytheran photography, is (Stathatos 2006). |
37 | For example, Stefanos Phiotakis was a well-known photographer, who was born in Crete in 1880s. There is little information on how he learned the art of photography and when exactly he launched his photographic endeavors. According to the Benaki Museum that houses Phiotakis’ archive since 2005, it seems that Phiotakis studied next to Chania-based photographers and also collaborated with Giorgos Potamitakis who had a portrait studio in Athens in the early 20th century. Thereafter Phiotakis migrated to the US and remained in the United States (information on Phiotakis Stefanos, Benaki Museum, Benaki Photographic archives). |
38 | Information from (West 2000). |
39 | In terms of play in the same period the US experienced the first “teddy bear frenzy” along with a first attempt to view children’s toys as educational tools (Worrell 1980, pp. 193–94). |
40 | This can be inferred to a degree by photographs of children in urban areas that appear in books and magazines of the time but also in the national television archive (ERT archive: children in the summertime-1939). |
41 | Yet, Bada points that members of these communities who were close to or below poverty line or who lived very isolated (geographically and socially) did not abide by the rules of garment uniformity (Bada 1991, p. 186). |
42 | For trade, for buying seeds/tools/goods that were not available in the small village community, for military service or to attend middle school/high school. |
43 | Vreli-Zachou mentions that in the 18th century, when Greek rural communities were gradually experiencing urbanization, social roles and structures were challenged and renegotiated and this “social shuffling” was acutely represented in peoples’ clothing (Vreli-Zachou 1990, p. 178). In the case of this research, the influence or the changing factor seemed to be America and not so much a nearby urban center. |
44 | For more information on the transformation of markets to match children’s needs and newly-gained autonomy regarding appearance and attire, also see (Thomas Cook 2004). A popular figure of the 1930s for the girls was that of Shirley Temple. As David Eldridge describes “Shirley Temple was no mere child star, but the superstar of the Depression. She was the top box office attraction every year from 1935 to 1938. Almost 90 per cent of Twentieth Century-Fox’s profits for 1936 were attributable to just three of her films” (Eldridge 2008, p. 63). |
45 | For explicit demands an over-spending on clothing, accessories and other extravaganzas, also see (Jacobson 2004, pp. 30, 151). |
46 | Nounos is the Greek word for godfather. |
47 | An Ottoman firman of 1806 dictated what Greek subordinates were allowed/obliged to wear and also divided Greek subjugates into three distinct social classes with distinct dressing codes for each. For example, as Vreli-Zachou points out, the third class could not wear socks or shoes (Vreli-Zachou 1990, p. 178). Vreli-Zachou adds that the Greek Orthodox church further contributed to the enforcement of the Ottoman laws, also dictating its own rules on what members of each social class were entitled to wear or not (as before, p. 179). Cretans on the other hand, under Venetian rule, were forced to adhere to Venetian laws that obliged them to adopt Venetian dressing styles, that could only be afforded by the rich. Kythera, also ruled by Venetians, received influences by the clothing and styles of Cretans and Peloponnesians who arrived in the island in response to a Venetian call for installation in the island and occupied the northern (Peloponnesians) and southern (Cretans) parts of the island, constituting the local island elites (Dodouras and Eirini 2016, p. 104). Later, English rule had its effect on local styles until the island’s annexation to Greece in 1864. |
48 | As Ortiz García distinguishes, “there are two categories of photos that people take. There are the formal, ritualistic and neat, that represent the individual rites of passage and other occasions of “formal presentation” of the family group, or else what we call ‘strong moments’ or official situations and then there are their opposites, which are those photos representing ordinary life” (Ortiz García 2006, p. 158). |
49 | Annette Kuhn discusses that “the baby’s nakedness, suggesting newness, naturalness, innocence, is set within particular conventions” in (Kuhn [1995] 2002, p. 49). |
50 | |
51 | The term “social birth” to describe baptism in Greek society was encountered in (Bada) where she makes reference to (Paradellis 1995) PhD dissertation entitled “Politismikes kai koinonikes diathlaseis tis gennisis ston elladiko choro tou 19ou aiona” (Cultural and social refractions of birth in the Greek space of the 19th century), Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences. |
52 | |
53 | Interviewing with the author’s father and locals of Laconia and Crete it was stated that all the clothes were dyed black in a big pot called “harani”, all mirrors in the house were covered with thick black cloth to symbolize the residents’ indifference towards external appearance and beauty and all furniture in the family’s “good room” or “sala” were covered in black cloth, to show their non-use (as celebrations would not take place in this house for the period of grief). In Crete, I.P. mentioned in an informal interview that a young woman whose husband died, watered her blossomed flowers with boiling water to symbolically show her utter grief. |
54 | Again through interviewing it was stated that families in grief abstained from all local festivities and celebrations for a period of time that varied according to the age/status and role of the deceased relative. Also, though the family attended in grief the services of the Orthodox Easter Holy Week, they were expected to abstain from Church service on Easter Sunday, to symbolize their grief and pain. |
55 | This tradition is also recorded in (Papathanasiou 2003). |
56 | In Kremasti, a story shared by the WWII generation is that of a family who made clothes for their children (in the 1940s) out of flour sacks, without being able to get rid of the letters, which luckily few people in the village could read and understand the initial purpose. The story is told as a “funny” anecdote. |
57 | For the procedures of cloth-processing and mending in a Greek mountainous community of that time, see also (Papathanasiou 2003, p. 121). |
58 | In Laconia funding for this also came from the migrants association in the US, mainly in New York. |
59 | This was especially the case in shepherds’ households where the seasonal movement of the family meant an abrupt early finish of the school year for shepherds’ children at the beginning of spring, or even their total non-attendance, when children (from both shepherd and agricultural households) were expected to contribute their labor to the service of the family, instead of attending school. |
60 | This is also discussed in (Papathanasiou 2003). |
61 | I borrow the term from Arjun Appadurai (1986). |
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Dounia, M. Children’s Clothing in a Picture: Explorations of Photography, Childhood and Children’s Fashions in Early 20th Century Greece and Its US Diaspora. Genealogy 2024, 8, 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030113
Dounia M. Children’s Clothing in a Picture: Explorations of Photography, Childhood and Children’s Fashions in Early 20th Century Greece and Its US Diaspora. Genealogy. 2024; 8(3):113. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030113
Chicago/Turabian StyleDounia, Margarita. 2024. "Children’s Clothing in a Picture: Explorations of Photography, Childhood and Children’s Fashions in Early 20th Century Greece and Its US Diaspora" Genealogy 8, no. 3: 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030113
APA StyleDounia, M. (2024). Children’s Clothing in a Picture: Explorations of Photography, Childhood and Children’s Fashions in Early 20th Century Greece and Its US Diaspora. Genealogy, 8(3), 113. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030113