urwa hocane
Image Source: Xoom.Pk

Urwa Hocane’s latest shoot with Fahad Hussyn isn’t going all too well. Whether it be her poetic captions that elude the reader or her outfits that are problematic, something is going on!

An Inspired Moment

It seems that Urwa Hocane decided she must venture into the art of poetry. If not that, even the art of prose is a deep enough well to explore. However, it turns out her effort was perceived as all too try-hard and strange!

In a recent post of hers in which she poses in a Fahad Hussyn piece, she went on talking about the “grand bazar of knowledge” and “folklore” and the “tune of songs”. This had people confused in one sentence, the next until they realized they had read it all but did not understand a single thing.

Read The Prose That Would Make Shakespeare Shy

 

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A post shared by URWA HOCANE (@urwatistic)

The Netizens’ Reaction

As you might know already, there is no culture of glossing over words in our society. If people want to say something, they say it either by hook or by crook. The same can be seen here as this thread collectively tries to decode Urwa’s prose. See for yourself what they have to say:

It’s Cultural Appropriation

Most Pakistanis are alien to the concept of cultural appropriation because our main agents of socialization such as media, social media or schools are also alien to it. Cultural appropriation means when elements of one culture are adopted into another deliberately. In order for this to be cultural appropriation, the culture from which something is taken must be a disadvantaged minority.

Urwa Hocane
Image Source: Xoom

While Fahad Hussyn may have wanted to explore the “folklore” of jugunabad, he could have done so in a better way! Why not create these dresses and have the native people model them?

Here he brings in elements of another culture – which is close to extinction – simply for his financial gains.

Make It New!

Ezra Pound once said “make it new!” about literature in the 18th century and we think the same spirit must be imbued in the fashion industry. Enough of romanticised folklores and desperate attempts to look “native”. Especially enough of using darker-skinned models as accessories in the shoots!

It’s the 21st century and Pakistani designers and celebs like Urwa Hocane must realise that fashion and political correctness are not mutually exclusive of each other!

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