#NaMo365: The Many Colours of PM Modi’s Headgear | Slideshow

The question of fashion was not fashionable among politicians, until PM Modi redefined the semiotics. 

The Quint
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the inauguration of the Hornbill Festival in Kohima, December 1,2014. (Photo: narendramodi.in)
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the inauguration of the Hornbill Festival in Kohima, December 1,2014. (Photo: narendramodi.in)
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Till a few years ago, the question of fashion was not fashionable among politicians clad in bland khadi kurtas and pajamas. But Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who belongs to a state where people in the arid zones wear prodigious cotton turbans, has redefined the semiotics of the cultural realm of ephemera.

This is reflected in his sartorial sense of dressing in which donning colourful headgear when visiting ethnically diverse states is an essential element.

Part of Modi’s reason to adopt ethnically symbolic behavioural codes is to retain social acceptance and partly to drive a self-reinforcing process by which he has motivated to protect and enhance his reputation not just as a Gujarati, but a national leader sensitive toward establishing good credentials among India’s many and culturally rich peoples.

Very few national leaders – Indira Gandhi and A B Vajpyee being the exceptions – have marketed appearances and the charm of images as well as Narendra Modi.

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: 16 May 2015,07:00 PM IST

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