Europe’s rapacious contact with Nigeria, the massive proselytization of the indigenous people of Nigeria to Christianity and Islam, and Britain’s colonization of Nigeria influenced, and to a great extent continues to influence, the cultures and cultural identities of the Nigerian people in multifarious ways. Falola (2003) asserts that “the termination of European rule has not put an end to European influence in Africa” (Falola 2003:116). This dissertation, however, is focused on only one aspect of those influences: the cultural shifts in dress codes dating back to the 18th century. Thus, this dissertation uses primary archival research to interrogate how, when and why the indigenous people of Nigeria assimilated and modified European cultur...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The arrival of colonialism, Christianity and Islam introduced widespread changes into African societ...
This thesis addresses a gap in our knowledge about the shifting meanings and practices associated wi...
The place of dress in human society has continued to arouse research-based interests, as a social is...
The main argument of this paper emerges from the submission that the advent of globalization resul...
Colonial rule impacted profoundly on the lives of Nigerian women and led to a reconfiguration of gen...
The paper examines the effect of foreign fashion on students dressing in Nigerian universities, for ...
Through in-depth, qualitative analysis of data from archives and research sites in Nigeria, the Unit...
Controversies about Islamic dress have become common-place in Europe since the later 1980s, with sta...
This study focuses on a small ethnic group in the western part of Igboland called Asaba. It describe...
The inception of sin as revealed in Genesis 3 is tied to the emergence and evolution of costume: cha...
The scramble for power that characterized the early colonial era in Africa was a competition among n...
This paper is predicated on the fact that migration of the Igbo to other countries has brought about...
textIn my dissertation, I argue that historians of Africa have overlooked the intersection between n...
Combining extant literature with archival and archaeological evidence, photo albums and oral interv...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The arrival of colonialism, Christianity and Islam introduced widespread changes into African societ...
This thesis addresses a gap in our knowledge about the shifting meanings and practices associated wi...
The place of dress in human society has continued to arouse research-based interests, as a social is...
The main argument of this paper emerges from the submission that the advent of globalization resul...
Colonial rule impacted profoundly on the lives of Nigerian women and led to a reconfiguration of gen...
The paper examines the effect of foreign fashion on students dressing in Nigerian universities, for ...
Through in-depth, qualitative analysis of data from archives and research sites in Nigeria, the Unit...
Controversies about Islamic dress have become common-place in Europe since the later 1980s, with sta...
This study focuses on a small ethnic group in the western part of Igboland called Asaba. It describe...
The inception of sin as revealed in Genesis 3 is tied to the emergence and evolution of costume: cha...
The scramble for power that characterized the early colonial era in Africa was a competition among n...
This paper is predicated on the fact that migration of the Igbo to other countries has brought about...
textIn my dissertation, I argue that historians of Africa have overlooked the intersection between n...
Combining extant literature with archival and archaeological evidence, photo albums and oral interv...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Pre...
The arrival of colonialism, Christianity and Islam introduced widespread changes into African societ...
This thesis addresses a gap in our knowledge about the shifting meanings and practices associated wi...