TY - CHAP TI - Dress of the Cook Islands AU - Alexeyeff, Kalissa A2 - Maynard, Margaret T2 - Berg Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion : Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands VL - 7 ET - 1 SP - 444 EP - 448 PY - 2010/// PB - Bloomsbury Academic CY - Oxford SN - 978-1-8478-8856-3 UR - https://www.bloomsburyfashioncentral.com/encyclopedia-chapter?docid=b-9781847888563&tocid=b-9781847888563-EDch7070 DB - Bloomsbury Fashion Video Archive~Bloomsbury Fashion Video Archive 2020 collection~Bloomsbury Fashion Video Archive 2021 collection~Bloomsbury Fashion Business Cases~Fashion Photography Archive~Fairchild Books Library~Berg Fashion Library~Bloomsbury Fashion Video Archive 2022 Update~Bloomsbury Fashion Business Cases 2022 Update~Berg Fashion Library 2022 Update~Berg Fashion Library 2023 Update~Bloomsbury Fashion Business Cases 2023 Update~Bloomsbury Fashion Video Archive 2023 Update~Bloomsbury Dress and Costume Library~ LA - en Y2 - 2024/3/29/ KW - Cook Islands KW - tradition KW - modernity KW - gender KW - performance KW - ’ei – flower and leaf headdress or necklace KW - kāka’u’—the generic Cook Islands Māori word for “clothing” KW - maro—loincloth worn by men KW - marokura – barkcloth waistband, often dyed red and worn by chiefs during ceremonies KW - mu’umu’u—a long, loose-fitting gown; “mother hubbard” KW - pare – hats KW - pare ariki – hat worn by chiefs KW - pā’oa– barkcloth dress worn by chiefs during ceremonies KW - pāreu—fabric cloth with Polynesian designs or a fabric tied like a sarong KW - pāreu kiri’au—“grass skirts” made from treated hibiscus fiber KW - rito hats – hats woven from young coconut leaves KW - tapa - barkcloth KW - tikoru—cloaks made from barkcloth KW - tiputa –poncho made from barkcloth KW - titi – a skirt or overskirt made from natural fibers ER -