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"My style is a homeless look. Homeless people inspire me," Kaffella (35) tells the photographer from Hel-Looks. "Homeless people with their ragged and oversize clothes inspire my style," agrees Joona (17). "I'm into dark clothes and homeless looks," Giuliano (17) tells the Helsinki style website.



The homeless are "the other in our midst". In terms of how they're living they might as well be on the other side of the world, yet they're living right beside us. They fascinate us. To admire them too vociferously is to court accusations of glorifying poverty and suffering, of course: for every style rebel who sees glamour in the homeless, there are three self-righteous conformists touting the right and duty of the homeless to drag themselves up by their bootstraps and become exactly like the rest of us. The difference that some celebrate, others seek to stamp out.

There's something appealing in the artlessness with which photographer Hideaki Takamatsu -- who's been photographing homeless people in Japan for fifteen years -- frames the question. Of his new photo book Street People -- coffee-table portraits of the homeless posing like fashion models -- he says: "I wanted to make a photo book that can attract young women". According to the Mainichi News, the book "opens the door on the beauty and style of the homeless" and "portrays the homeless just as they are -- in their regular outfits and settlements. Readers of the volume will not see the homeless as pathetic, but as rather fashionable."



The current recession and the environmental crisis are international, and so is the accompanying fascination with the homeless; suddenly they're "ahead of us" rather than "behind us"; suddenly their difference from us is a "good difference" rather than a "bad difference", one inspiring fascination rather than horror. American style magazine Details recently ran an article in their Men Style section about Daniel Suelo, who's been living without money, in a cave in the hills outside Moab, Utah, since the turn of the century. Suelo -- an anthropology graduate who dropped out to become a monk in Thailand and India -- keeps a blog, which he updates from the Moab public library. It's called Zero Currency.



"I clamber along a set of red-rock cliffs to the mouth of his cave," reports Details style journalist Christopher Ketcham, "where I find a note signed with a smiley face: CHRIS, FEEL FREE TO USE ANYTHING, EAT ANYTHING (NOTHING HERE IS MINE). From the outside, the place looks like a hollowed teardrop, about the size of an Amtrak bathroom, with enough space for a few pots that hang from the ceiling, a stove under a stone eave, big buckets full of beans and rice, a bed of blankets in the dirt, and not much else. Suelo's been here for three years, and it smells like it."

But soon the article hits a lyrical sweet spot that evokes envy more than disgust: "The morning ritual is simple and slow: a cup of sharp tea brewed from the needles of piñon and juniper trees, a swim in the cold emerald water where the creek pools in the red rock. Then, two naked cavemen lounging under the Utah sun. Around noon, we forage along the banks and under the cliffs, looking for the stuff of a stir-fry dinner. We find mustard plants among the rocks, the raw leaves as satisfying as cauliflower, and down in the cool of the creek—where Suelo gets his water and takes his baths (no soap for him) —we cull watercress in heads as big as supermarket lettuce, and on the bank we spot a lode of wild onions, with bulbs that pop clean from the soil."



If anchorites become style icons and asceticism becomes aspirational, what can we expect? Well, perhaps a wave of cave gentrification of the kind seen recently in the New York Daily News, which threw a spotlight on the desirable three-story home of Curt and Deborah Sleeper in Festus Missouri -- built inside a cave. But hobo pioneers would have to scoff at the Sleepers, who've brought a slew of mod cons to their cave life. Living in a cave inside a modern, fully-equipped house... well, it's the slippery slope to homelesslessness, isn't it?

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 10:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Nah, there's something wrong with all those. The problem lies in paying attention to something so frivolous as "style" in the first place.

Style? Forget it!

"My style? Forget it!" Kaffella (35) tells the photographer from Hel-Looks. "I'm afraid we're going to have to ask you to leave," agrees Joona (17). "Seriously, leave or we call the police," Giuliano (17) tells the Helsinki style website.

People who care about style are "the other in our midst". In terms of how they're living they might as well be on the other side of the world, yet they're living right beside us. We need to kick them out, or possibly kill them. But how to do that without facing criminal charges? A subtle campaign of harrassment might get the message across. Sabotage their cameras and orchestrate denial of service attacks on their websites. Mail dead animals to their homes. Stare menacingly at them in public places and refuse to answer their requests. Beat the shit out of them if they take your photo. They'll get the message eventually: FASHION FASCISTS LIKE YOU ARE NOT WANTED AROUND HERE! TAKE YOUR DIVISIVE DEFINITIONS OF "PERSONAL STYLE" SOMEWHERE ELSE!

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 10:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bijou.livejournal.com
Yes, the problem is clearly that people are dressing as something they're not, and has nothing to do with glamorizing a horrible issue for publicity, while downplaying how serious homelessness really is and making it out to be some sort of lifestyle choice.

I can see why they call you an intellectual, it is because you are clever and wise.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 10:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imomus.livejournal.com
Hell, let's just go back to glorifying the meek, the humble, the downtrodden, those unburdened by possessions, the beggars, the outcasts and the homeless. All major world religions can't be wrong.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 10:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] electricwitch.livejournal.com
Yes. That is why I think that's a silly thing to do.

Because I hate people who are so frivolous as to care about style. Definitely.

*mails dead animals to Renato*

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 10:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] krskrft.livejournal.com
Momus:

The problem with drawing these equivalencies is that, while the rich and the "normals" have actual style choices at their disposal, most homeless people do not. It's characterizing homeless peoples' clothing as "fashion" and "style" that bugs me, not the idea that homeless people should be off-limits or something like that.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-07-26 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pebble-galaxy.livejournal.com
You are hilariously clever.

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