Latin American Cultural Objects and Episodes. William H. Beezley

Latin American Cultural Objects and Episodes - William H. Beezley


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the Italian hat company Panizza’s factory with a $2 million credit, $600,000 of it from the U.S. Agency for International Development. Manager Nosiglia expected the expansion and new machinery to double the factory’s output to one million felt hats per year while enabling it to make 60,000 rabbit‐fur hats. He said 20,000 felt hats would be exported to Italy for Panizza’s former clients. He also claimed the enlarged factory would benefit farmers, who would supply the fur of at least 50,000 rabbits a year and wool from 10,000 sheep, according to company plans. “The economic impact will be extraordinary,” Nosiglia declared. Charcas & Glorieta already made beside the derbies thousands of “J. R. Dallas” hats that sold for $15 apiece as well as traditional hats for nearly every region of Bolivia.

      Nevertheless, the derby remains essential headgear in La Paz for Cholas. Worldwide, the Borsalino’s unmistakable shape had retained its iconic status. In 1970, the Borsalino gave its name to a box‐office hit, Borsalino, that starred Jean‐Paul Belmondo and Alain Delon as two French gangsters. A sequel followed in 1974, Borsalino and Co. The two films relaunched the Borsalino after what had been a fallow period for hat wearing, on the international fashion scene and in films. John Belushi wore one in The Blues Brothers and pop star Michael Jackson often wore a fedora matched with a trench coat just like Bogart.

      The relationship between Borsalino and the cinema is so strong that it regularly is featured in exhibitions and shows. One example was the recent exhibition Cinema Wears a Hat, held in the Triennale di Milano. This trip through the history of cinema and fashion highlighted how the Italian hat is deeply connected with international films. Memorably, the evil henchman Oddjob in the James Bond film Goldfinger wielded a bowler as a lethal weapon. Batman’s best‐known villain, the Riddler, and the evil lead character Alex DeLarge in Stanley Kubrick’s film A Clockwork Orange wore signature bowlers. Other Borsalino wearers ranged from Indiana Jones to the great western stars, from Johnny Depp to Audrey Hepburn. Current‐day popular music performer and producer Pharrel Williams wears one today.

      Indigenous women in Puno and in much of Andean Peru also choose to wear the derby‐style hat. Coincidentally these indigenous women who wear them are known as Cholas, like those in La Paz, and the hat was styled for them as the Chola hat.

      For a sense of identity, status within the community, and definition of style or beauty, many communities continue to wear a representative hat, although the practice probably dates only from the colonial period. The cholitas of La Paz, nevertheless, continue to wear as their status symbol, not much more than a century old, the derby hat.

       Readings

      1 E. Gabrielle Kuenzli, Acting Inca: National Belonging in Early Twentieth‐Century Bolivia (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2013).

      2 Zoila S. Mendoza, Creating Our Own: Folklore, Performance, and Identity in Cuzco, Peru (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008).

      3 Regina Root, ed., Latin American Fashion Reader (Oxford: Berg, 2005).

      Notes

      1 This chapter has benefited from the suggestions about research in Italian sources from Lucia Carminati


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