“This makes Catz formals a place to express yourself in a new spectrum of ways”, said Charlie Northrop, who spearheaded the campaign, in an email to the student body. “Men can wear dresses, women can wear suits, and non-binary people are free to define the outfits that feel most appropriate to them in a formal setting.”
Charlie began transitioning this year, and as the Formal Hall officer for the MCR, she was thrilled that the Dean suggested the wording of the dress code should be changed when she emailed to ask about it.
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Great care was taken to ensure the correct wording of the new dress code, says Ellie Chan, the college’s MCR President. In a typically academic fashion, there were lengthy discussions over the definition of a suit, and the fellows instigated a spirited debate over the differences between men and women’s formal shirts.
The dress code campaign was a committee-wide effort, and the combined work of the St. Catherine’s MCR and JCR is inspiring other colleges to adopt a similarly progressive ethos. Clare college has already emailed Charlie to request materials, so that they might match St. Catharine’s progressive ethos.
The revised dress code for formal halls now includes the statement: “Members and their guests must be dressed in suitably smart dress. ‘Smart dress’ is defined without reference to considerations of gender identity or expression.”
more:adoringdressau.com
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