Even though she writes:
My interest in tattooing stems from my upbringing. Living in Aotearoa, from roughly the ages of eight to 28, meant that I was exposed to Maori and Pacific Islands tattooing attitudes.I don't think she has a tribal reason herself for getting tattooed - and the tattoos of her own that she puts in the article are not of a tribal design. She further gives the "high brow" justification for the practice:
If I see my tattoos as permanent records of rites of passage and power over adversity, ancient women and their societies may have been doing the same - but with a more restricted range of motif options. The limited range of motifs would have been due to both social conventions, the skill of the tattooist, and the tools used to create the tattoo.Just because women got it done 2000 years ago in Greece or Egypt, I see no particular reason why this should encourage women to get kitchy art permanently fixed to their body now. (And I maintain - the great majority of tattooing done in the West is kitch art.)
Anyway, each to their own, as they say; just that I'll keep complaining about it, too, until fashions change. (I still suspect it will, someday, somehow....)
yes totally agree no tatts and ban them on women.
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