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Hoodie evolves into a symbol of protest

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CHICAGO (MCT) — Nineteen-year-old Jonathan Knowles has an array of hoodies hanging in his dorm room closet, scattered among his suits, dress shirts and ties.

But the moment he walks out in a hoodie, he said, he is no longer just a Northwestern University engineering student. In the eyes of some, he is a threatening menace.

“There’s just a stigma that goes with wearing a hoodie, especially late at night,” said Knowles, a sophomore from Orlando, Fla. “I have no problem with someone being cautious, but it’s not right to associate every black male who is just minding his own business with being up to no good.”

The hooded sweatshirt has undergone an evolution in American culture since being developed by Champion in the 1930s.

In the beginning, the garment was primarily used by industrial workers in upstate New York. But in the last 40 years, the hoodie has become an icon of popular culture, ranging from a symbol of triumph when Rocky Balboa wore it in the movie “Rocky” to a statement of defiance when hip-hop groups such as N.W.A. and Public Enemy began wearing them in music videos.

And now, in the public uproar over the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin — a Florida youth who was wearing a hoodie when he was shot to death by a neighborhood watchman who thought he looked suspicious — the hooded sweatshirt has become for some a symbol of social injustice.

College students have been wearing them during campus protests, U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., was kicked off the House floor on Wednesday for wearing one in Congress, ministers are wearing them in the pulpit and LeBron James and his Miami Heat basketball team posed for a picture in hoodies — all to show solidarity with Martin.

For Americans who are angry over Martin’s death and the initial decision by authorities not to charge George Zimmerman in the shooting, wearing a hoodie is a way to show a common bond with Martin and send a message that racial stereotyping is wrong, said Emmett Price, chairman of African-American studies at Northeastern University in Boston.

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