ONLY BLACK IS THE NEW BLACK: A CULTURAL HISTORY OF FASHION'S FAVORITE SHADE
When the group Time’s Up encouraged all actresses and actors who would walk the Golden Globes red carpet to dress in a show of solidarity against sexual
harassment of women in Hollywood and other workplaces, the color it asked them
to wear was black. On Jan. 30, a group of women in the US congress followed
their lead, donning black for the first state of the union address by president
Trump, who has himself been accused by numerous women of sexual misconduct.
There is nothing about black that inherently signifies protest, but really no other shade would have sent so clear a message. There’s a reason country legend
Johnny Cash also chose to wear black as a reminder to Americans of the everyday
injustices in their midst.
Black clothing has an undeniable power. Unlike red or green, which represent specific wavelengths of light, black isn’t exactly a color; it’s what we see
when an object absorbs all visible wavelengths, putting it in a category by
itself. Its singular darkness has a unique visual potency, and its adaptability
has long made it open to interpretation by the numerous groups that have adopted
it. Black connotes seriousness and diligence, as in the black worn by religious
orders. It can be sinister or rebellious, like the black cloaks of witches or
the black leather jackets worn by biker gangs. In many cultures, it’s the color
of mourning. But it can simultaneously be the epitome of chic and
sophistication, yet charged with eroticism.
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