Sian Hindle
Dr Sian Hindle’s research interests centre on jewellery as an element of dress, and she holds a PhD exploring how jewellery’s wear and use contributes to embodied identity. Her early research involved exploration of jewellery’s gifted nature, and the ensuing reciprocation – through wear and use – that engages both giver and receiver in bonds of appreciation and attachment. Using a phenomenological lens, she analyses gifted jewellery in terms of how the wearer’s perspective oscillates between self-as-subject and self-as-object, capturing and crystallising both the felt experience of wearing the jewellery and the external perspective of the giver of the gift. Her subsequent projects seek to explore dower or dowry jewellery as ‘total social facts’ and to analyse dowry’s ability to pull on the full range of legal, economic, religious, aesthetic and political meanings and associations that are at play within the dowry’s social context.