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‘Dirty Paki Lingerie’ defies stereotypes of Muslim women

August 15, 2012 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

The stimulating, comedic, thought-provoking and controversial one-woman show, Dirty Paki Lingerie, comes to Edinburgh tomorrow night.

A special performance of the play is being followed by a discussion with the playwright and performer, Aizzah Fatima, who has received international plaudits and praise for her courageous, boundary-breaking work.

Sex, religion, and politics intermingle and collide in the play, as six American Muslim Pakistani women air their feelings, stories and experiences in a frank way.

Dirty Paki Lingerie runs from 8pm at St John’s Church Hall (Venue 127), and last approximately two hours, including a discussion with Farkhanda Chaudhry OBE and Shabnum Mustapha, Director of Amnesty International Scotland, along with Aizzah Fatima.

The production is one of 400 events across 21 venues in the Festival of Spirituality and Peace, which runs from 3-27 August in Edinburgh.

The show’s creator insists the controversial title she has chosen is important to understanding what the play is about and what it is aiming to achieve.

“The juxtaposition of ‘Paki’ and ‘lingerie’ grabs attention since Pakistani women may be stereotypically thought of as very conservative and not sexual,” she says. “But in the play, we learn that wearing the hijab doesn’t necessitate that one is conservative in all aspects of life.”

Ms Fatima plays some twenty characters altogether in the show, which is in turns funny, touching and thoughtful.

Among those characters is Selma, a hijabi feminist caught between her commitment to Muslim culture and her desire to wear sexy lingerie, and Asma, a mother searching for her daughter’s suitor in the Urdu Times Matrimonial section.

The cultural references veer surprisingly from 18th-century Urdu poet Mirza Ghalib through Justin Timberlake’s hit ‘SexyBack’.

Be prepared to have your outlook and preconceptions challenged by a robustly entertaining evening, is the overall message.

The show is also running at Assembly as part of the Fringe. Part of the proceeds from the Festival of Spirituality and Peace performance will be going to charity, however.

* Dirty Paki Lingerie, 8pm, 16 August 2012, St John’s Church Hall, Edinburgh. Tickets on the door or from The Hub.

* Follow regular updates from the Festival on Spirituality and Peace News: http://festivalofspirituality.blogspot.co.uk/

* Follow the Festival of Spirituality and Peace on Ekklesia: http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/festivalofspirituality

* Festival website, programme and bookings: http://www.festivalofspirituality.org.uk/

* Twitter alert: https://twitter.com/FoSPalert

Ekklesia is a sponsor and media partner of the Festival.

[Ekk/3]

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Dani Read Designed "Blade Runner"-Inspired Lingerie

August 15, 2012 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

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Dani Read designs elegant lingerie, loungewear, and toys for the future. After working for some of the most exciting lingerie brands in the business, she launched her own line, FYI, in 2010. Since then she’s been designing each season’s collection around a female archetype. For spring/summer 2013, she’s been inspired by the female androids of science fiction, their androgyny, intelligence, and super-human sexuality.

In “The Replicant” Dani draws from sci-fi staples like Blade Runner and the fiction of Philip K. Dick and David Mitchell. Each piece in the collection has been named after a science fiction character. In a culture where technology can sometimes undermine emotional intimacy—all that texting and Facebook stalking doesn’t always facilitate real, human connection—Dani hopes that her lingerie will encourage partners to interact. She incorporates bondage elements and is researching future technology where a garment’s fabric will change color with touch in an effort to make the function of beautiful lingerie more than just its removal. I talked with Dani about her aesthetic and her hopes for fashion’s future. She gave Motherboard a first look at the video lookbook for “The Replicant,” and chatted with me about the future of robo-inspired undergarments.

Read the interview at Motherboard.VICE.com

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