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Many
German-American festivals are opportunities to see Dirndl and Lederhosen
fashions in all varieties. But it is the dance groups who can verge at the
annual Steuben Parade or at many local and regional "Oktoberfests"
that illustrate the multitude of traditional costumes. While native dresses
prescribe who wears what, when and how, the Dirndl and Lederhosen dresses
are not native dresses but folklore fashion. They are subject to fashion
changes and have created a whole fashion industry.
What our Museum shows are "Trachten"
- German costumes - generally limited in design to their traditional form
for a given region or necessity. We have 15 colorful and wonderfully
embroidered and decorated tradtional costumes on display. Their origins
reach from Bavaria to Westphalia, from Fresia to the Blackforest and from
former German settlements in Rumania to the Zipser Germans of the high Tatra
in Slovakia.
Even though traditional costumes
today have lost most of their importance and do not play a major role in
their globalized and leveled society, people still wear them in many places
and on special occasions. That is especially true for German-Americans who
successfully are trying to keep their ethnic, culture and identities alive.
With our exhibit, we are trying to support their activities and inform and
educate a larger audience about the still existing varieties of German
traditions and cultures living amongst German-Americans in the United
States.
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