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A comparison of the body shapes of young Swazi women with those of body forms used in apparel manufacturingMabuza, Letsiwe Lindiwe January 2012 (has links)
In order to achieve good apparel fit, it is necessary to identify, define and classify the size
and shape of a population based on a combination of key body measurements (Petrova &
Ashdown, 2008). Unrepresentative sizing systems ultimately lead to apparel fit problems
which are further compounded by an unstandardised and ambiguous communication of
sizing and fit within the apparel manufacturing sector (Chun-Yoon & Jasper, 1996; Winks,
1997; Simmons & Istook, 2004).
According to Magagula and Zwane (2006), the sizing system used by the apparel industry in
Swaziland is based on British anthropometric measurements taken in the 1940s; yet there is
a significant variance in the body proportions and dimensions of different ethnic groups and
within ethnic groups (Yu, 2004c:183). It is therefore predictable that young Swazi women
would experience apparel fit problems with ready-to-wear apparel. Body forms are
manufactured using body dimensions of the apparel manufacturer’s target market in order to
yield satisfactory levels of fit. This is however not the case for the Swazi market, as very little
current anthropometric data exists on Swazi women. As a result, small-scale apparel
manufacturers encounter problems with regard to body forms that are not manufactured
according to the shape of Swazi women. The aim of this research was therefore to identify and describe the most prevalent body
shapes of young Swazi women using body dimensions, to identify and describe the body
shapes of the currently used body forms through body dimensions, to describe and compare
the most prevalent body measurements and proportions of young Swazi women and those of
currently used body forms, and finally to test and evaluate the fit of the test garment which
represents the most prevalent size and shape of the Swazi women, on the body forms. This
study is explorative in nature as it helped to clarify a largely undefined area of body shape
analysis in respect of young Swazi women. Under the quantitative research strategy, a
survey research methodology was used. Anthropometric techniques and traditional tailor’s
measurements were used to obtain body measurements for various dimensions of young
Swazi women, and training in anthropometry was undertaken to ensure that the
measurements were taken reliably and accurately.
It emerges from the results of this study that the most prevalent body shape of young Swazi
women is the triangular body shape, followed by the hourglass body shape, while the
inverted triangle is the least common body shape. The two body form brands employed in
this study on the other hand are found to bear different body shapes from each other.
Though one brand appears to have the same shape as that of the most prevalent body
shape of young Swazi women, it is apparent that there are notable differences regarding the
degree of the body contours, i.e. the Swazi women are conspicuously heavier and more
rounded at the hip area – as the measurement differences show. The expectation that this
body form will offer a better fit to Swazi women as they have similar body shapes in principle,
is not realised when the fit of the test garment is evaluated, due to the vast differences in the
drop values. The fit problems that are predicted to be experienced by young Swazi women
when using the body forms for pattern generation, based on the significant measurement
differences, are indeed observed during the evaluation of the fit of the test garment on the
body forms. The fit problems exhibited during the testing of the fit of the test garment based
on the most prevalent body shape of young Swazi women on the body forms, are mainly due
to a wider lower hip girth and shorter length proportions at the upper torso of the young
Swazi women. The results of this study contribute to a better understanding of the body shapes that exist
among young Swazi women and the fit problems that young Swazi women experience as a
consequence of unrepresentative body forms being used in terms of size and shape.
Furthermore, the need for all stakeholders in the apparel manufacturing industry to reach
consensus on the standardisation and communication of sizing emerges as a step toward
affording better fitting apparel to the Swazi women. / Dissertation (MConsumer Science)--University of Pretoria, 2012. / gm2014 / Consumer Science / unrestricted
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Religion, culture and gender : a study of women's search for gender equality in SwazilandZigira, Christopher Amherst Byuma 11 1900 (has links)
Although Swazi women's contribution to national development has been phenomenal, they like
any other women in patriarchal societies confront an overbearing situation in which they have
been regarded and treated as minors, both in the family and most spheres of public life. This has
largely been due to the social construction of gender. Traditional gender-based attitudes, deeply
ingrained in the people's mind set, not infrequently, have limited women's access to and control
of various aspects of public life, and impinge on their rights, most especially the rights to selfdetermination
and equal participation in the decision making process. Coupled with religion
which influences "the deepest level of what it means to be human" (King, 1994:4) and zealous
cultural conservatism, the Swazi women, with a few notable exceptions, experience an asymmetry
of power due to the pervasive nature of gender. Nonetheless, the history of Swaziland bears testimony, however muted, to a legacy ofwomen's struggles to overcome gendered conditions
imposed upon them either by taking full advantage of their spiritual endowment and charisma to
overcome attitudinal barriers or by organising themselves into groups to work for the social
transformation of their conditions and status.
This study examines the Swazi women's search for gender equality. It discusses the social and
cultural context of gender in Swaziland, the various moments in the Swazi women's quest for
equality and its manifestations, and the push and pull effect of religion and culture. Particular
attention is given to four organisations, namely Lutsango lwakaNgwane (loosely referred to as
women's regiments), the Council of Swaziland Churches, the Women's Resource Centre (Umtapo
waBomake) and Swaziland Action Group Against Abuse (SWAGAA). The study shows that
Swazi women have, across a passage of time, adopted different strategies, including ritual,
economic empowerment and creation of new knowledge through promotion of gender awareness
and social advocacy either in a womanist approach that accepts women's embeddedness in Swazi
culture or in the liberal feminist tradition that espouses women's individual rights. However, the
study shows that the women's movement has yet to reach the critical mass level so as to influence
public policy and come to terms with the deconstruction of the dominant gender ideology. / Religious Studies and Arabic / D. Litt. et Phil. (Religious Studies)
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Religion, culture and gender : a study of women's search for gender equality in SwazilandZigira, Christopher Amherst Byuma 11 1900 (has links)
Although Swazi women's contribution to national development has been phenomenal, they like
any other women in patriarchal societies confront an overbearing situation in which they have
been regarded and treated as minors, both in the family and most spheres of public life. This has
largely been due to the social construction of gender. Traditional gender-based attitudes, deeply
ingrained in the people's mind set, not infrequently, have limited women's access to and control
of various aspects of public life, and impinge on their rights, most especially the rights to selfdetermination
and equal participation in the decision making process. Coupled with religion
which influences "the deepest level of what it means to be human" (King, 1994:4) and zealous
cultural conservatism, the Swazi women, with a few notable exceptions, experience an asymmetry
of power due to the pervasive nature of gender. Nonetheless, the history of Swaziland bears testimony, however muted, to a legacy ofwomen's struggles to overcome gendered conditions
imposed upon them either by taking full advantage of their spiritual endowment and charisma to
overcome attitudinal barriers or by organising themselves into groups to work for the social
transformation of their conditions and status.
This study examines the Swazi women's search for gender equality. It discusses the social and
cultural context of gender in Swaziland, the various moments in the Swazi women's quest for
equality and its manifestations, and the push and pull effect of religion and culture. Particular
attention is given to four organisations, namely Lutsango lwakaNgwane (loosely referred to as
women's regiments), the Council of Swaziland Churches, the Women's Resource Centre (Umtapo
waBomake) and Swaziland Action Group Against Abuse (SWAGAA). The study shows that
Swazi women have, across a passage of time, adopted different strategies, including ritual,
economic empowerment and creation of new knowledge through promotion of gender awareness
and social advocacy either in a womanist approach that accepts women's embeddedness in Swazi
culture or in the liberal feminist tradition that espouses women's individual rights. However, the
study shows that the women's movement has yet to reach the critical mass level so as to influence
public policy and come to terms with the deconstruction of the dominant gender ideology. / Religious Studies and Arabic / D. Litt. et Phil. (Religious Studies)
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