The Cowl Does Not Make The Monk - Or Does It?

The Cowl Does Not Make The Monk - Or Does It?

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We can see it every day: at work, at home, in the bars...you change your clothes depending on where you are going, and clothes can even help to recognize the role of a person. In the production of work wear, for example, in Italy you need to keep in mind the various roles inside a building yard so that everyone can be recognizable at first sight: as a 1990 law goes, red caps for the workers, yellow for the qualified works and white for the auxiliary staff.
Even more than for recognizing the role, the work wear is needed for protection; depending on the job, youll need to think about the protection of the respiratory system, for workers who handle toxic material; in other cases it will be important to protect hearing, for example for builders when using some machineries: the first aim is that of protecting workers from accidents and from characteristics of the working environment that can cause damages to hearing, sight, and so on.
In other cases it may be necessary to wear a protection for the head, like in the building yards, or for the sight, like in the case of welders or even dentists. Summing up, every job has its own protections, which are prescribed by law, but most of all by common sense.
Out of the working place, clothing can help us to give an approximate age to the person who wears it, and even to have an idea of his or her style and tastes. Or it can tell us whats his work, if hes wearing a uniform, or his religion, if hes a priest, a monk, a nun, or even if hes a sporty or an elegant type, if he likes colours or prefers passing by unnoticed...then, there are places where a certain kind of clothes is not due, but its actually appropriated: it would not be suitable to go to the theatre wearing a tracksuit, just like wearing an evening dress would be inappropriate at the gym. At a wedding the white dress is reserved for the bride, while for the guests it would not be proper to wear a black dress; you only need a hat to recognize a soldier, and a white collar to spot a priest. Students, in some countries and in some institutes, wear a uniform, and in the occidental culture you only need a ring to understand the sentimental status of a person, while in other cultures single and married women can be recognized thanks to the kind of dresses they wear.
Hence, even though you can certainly not decide how a person is just looking at his or her clothes, sometimes actually its not just a purely aesthetical matter, but its got its importance in work and security, or in society and traditions. Then, if we add social occasions, in which the clothes are a matter of thoughts, praises and regrets, then we can arrive to the conclusion that clothing is quite important in our society. They say that the cowl does not make the monk; its true, indeed, but it can help to recognize him: though dressing like a monk wont be enough to actually be one, if you are a monk you normally wear a dress that identifies you.


About the Author:

This article was written by Lia Contesso, with support from dispositive anticaduta. For any information please visit prodotti pronto soccorso, or visit prodotti pulizia industriale.



Article Originally Published On: http://www.articlesnatch.com


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