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Bridging theory and practice, this accessible text considers fashion from both cultural studies and fashion studies perspectives, and addresses the growing interaction between the two fields.
Kaiser and Green use a wide range of cross-cultural case studies to explore how race, ethnicity, class, gender and other identities intersect and are produced through embodied fashion. Drawing on intersectionality in feminist theory and cultural studies, Fashion and Cultural Studies is essential reading for students and scholars.
This revised edition includes updated case studies and two new…mehr
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- mit Kopierschutz
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- Größe: 43.08MB
Bridging theory and practice, this accessible text considers fashion from both cultural studies and fashion studies perspectives, and addresses the growing interaction between the two fields.
Kaiser and Green use a wide range of cross-cultural case studies to explore how race, ethnicity, class, gender and other identities intersect and are produced through embodied fashion. Drawing on intersectionality in feminist theory and cultural studies, Fashion and Cultural Studies is essential reading for students and scholars.
This revised edition includes updated case studies and two new chapters. The first new chapter explores religion, spirituality, and faith in relation to style, fashion, and dress. The second offers a critique of "beauty" and considers dressed embodiment inclusive of diverse sizes, shapes and dis/abilities. Throughout the text, Kaiser and Green use a range of examples to interrogate the complex entanglements of production, regulation, distribution, consumption, and subject formation within and through fashion.
Kaiser and Green use a wide range of cross-cultural case studies to explore how race, ethnicity, class, gender and other identities intersect and are produced through embodied fashion. Drawing on intersectionality in feminist theory and cultural studies, Fashion and Cultural Studies is essential reading for students and scholars.
This revised edition includes updated case studies and two new chapters. The first new chapter explores religion, spirituality, and faith in relation to style, fashion, and dress. The second offers a critique of "beauty" and considers dressed embodiment inclusive of diverse sizes, shapes and dis/abilities. Throughout the text, Kaiser and Green use a range of examples to interrogate the complex entanglements of production, regulation, distribution, consumption, and subject formation within and through fashion.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury UK eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. November 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781350104709
- Artikelnr.: 62504013
- Verlag: Bloomsbury UK eBooks
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. November 2021
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781350104709
- Artikelnr.: 62504013
Susan B. Kaiser is Professor of Textiles and Clothing, and Gender, Sexuality and Women's Studies, and is a member of the Cultural Studies Graduate Groups at the University of California, Davis. She is the author of The Social Psychology of Clothing: Symbolic Appearances in Context (2nd edition).
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments 1. Fashion Studies and Cultural
Studies Articulation Style-fashion-dress The fields of fashion studies and
cultural studies Conceptualizing culture and fashion Circuit of
style-fashion-dress model Production Consumption Distribution Subject
formation Regulation 2. Intersectional, Transnational Fashion Subjects
Assumption 1: Structure-agency dynamics include processes of persuasion,
consent, and resistance. Assumption 2: Subject formation through
style-fashion-dress is a process of navigating intersectionalities.
Assumption 3: Structures of feeling - expressed through subject formation
and the fashion process alike - articulate between everyday life and
culture through the circuit of style-fashion-dress Ambiguity Cultural
Ambivalence Cultural Anxiety Assumption 4: The field of critical fashion
studies needs to move from identity nots to identity (k)nots Assumption 5:
Fashion is transnational - not merely western or "Euromodern" Assumption 6:
The process of negotiating ambiguity is not a level playing field, and it
is a material process - especially in a transnational context 3. Fashioning
the National Subject Nation ? essence Nation as different than:
Representing the other Folk costume, national dress and fashion Working the
hyphen: Nation-state and style-fashion-dress French Revolution Chinese
Cultural Revolution (and beyond) From European expansion to globalization
Decolonizing fashion: Beyond the metaphor Globalization Intersectionalities
and entanglements 4. Racial Rearticulations and Ethnicities Race and
ethnicity: Sliding signifiers Racial and ethnic rearticulations Color Hair
Ethnic re-articulations: Belongings-in-Difference Sliding into
appropriation, sliding into religion 5. Religion, Fashion, and Spirituality
Subject formation Spirituality, subjectivity, and materiality Modesty
Piety, orthodoxy, religiosity Regulation State alignment with religion
Freedom from religion Freedom of religion (religious freedom) Production,
distribution, and consumption The Jewish diaspora and the textile,
clothing, and retail industries The globalization of Muslim fashion 6.
Class Matters, Fashion Matters Conceptualizing class Caste systems
Sumptuary laws, materials, and the "natural" order Class,
intersectionalities, and industrial capitalism From textile to apparel
production: At home, in the factory, and in protest Class and fast fashion
Metaphors of class structure and change: The flows of fashion Status claims
and status demurrals 7. Gendering Fashion, Fashioning Gender: Beyond
Binaries Soft assemblages Marking, unmarking, and remarking gender Sex,
gender, and style-fashion-dress: Feminist deconstructions Theorizing the
body and style-fashion-dress Transgender studies through bodies and
style-fashion-dress Menswear out of the academic closet Multiple
masculinities Zoot suit La SAPE in Congo US National Survey of Male
Intersectionalities 8. Sexual Subjectivities and Style-Fashion-Dress
Sexual subjectivities Binary "beginnings" and reversals Homophobic
discourses On the protracted coming out of heterosexuality 1960s and 1970s:
Social movements and sexual fashions 1980s and beyond: Queering fashion
Gazing subjects and positionalities Sexuality through intersectionalities
9. Dressed Embodiment From phenomenology to dressed embodiment Abstracting
the body and representing embodiment Anthropometrics and sizing
Stigmatizing and celebrating fat bodies Sizeism and the fashion industry
Flaunting fat Dis/abled bodies Athletics and bodily exceptionalism
Addressing ableism Disabling environments and style-fashion-dress
Fashioning disability Concealment Diversion and reframing Modifying and
making Compensation Social uniqueness Social inclusion Embodied
subjectivities 10. Bodies in Motion Through Time and Space Time and space
(and place) Age/generation and place Fashion's way with time in space:
Spatiotemporalities Industrial time Anti/nonlinear time and space Nostalgia
Space-Time compression and "speed space" Uchronic temporality and utopian
spaces Closing/opening thoughts Bibliography Index
Studies Articulation Style-fashion-dress The fields of fashion studies and
cultural studies Conceptualizing culture and fashion Circuit of
style-fashion-dress model Production Consumption Distribution Subject
formation Regulation 2. Intersectional, Transnational Fashion Subjects
Assumption 1: Structure-agency dynamics include processes of persuasion,
consent, and resistance. Assumption 2: Subject formation through
style-fashion-dress is a process of navigating intersectionalities.
Assumption 3: Structures of feeling - expressed through subject formation
and the fashion process alike - articulate between everyday life and
culture through the circuit of style-fashion-dress Ambiguity Cultural
Ambivalence Cultural Anxiety Assumption 4: The field of critical fashion
studies needs to move from identity nots to identity (k)nots Assumption 5:
Fashion is transnational - not merely western or "Euromodern" Assumption 6:
The process of negotiating ambiguity is not a level playing field, and it
is a material process - especially in a transnational context 3. Fashioning
the National Subject Nation ? essence Nation as different than:
Representing the other Folk costume, national dress and fashion Working the
hyphen: Nation-state and style-fashion-dress French Revolution Chinese
Cultural Revolution (and beyond) From European expansion to globalization
Decolonizing fashion: Beyond the metaphor Globalization Intersectionalities
and entanglements 4. Racial Rearticulations and Ethnicities Race and
ethnicity: Sliding signifiers Racial and ethnic rearticulations Color Hair
Ethnic re-articulations: Belongings-in-Difference Sliding into
appropriation, sliding into religion 5. Religion, Fashion, and Spirituality
Subject formation Spirituality, subjectivity, and materiality Modesty
Piety, orthodoxy, religiosity Regulation State alignment with religion
Freedom from religion Freedom of religion (religious freedom) Production,
distribution, and consumption The Jewish diaspora and the textile,
clothing, and retail industries The globalization of Muslim fashion 6.
Class Matters, Fashion Matters Conceptualizing class Caste systems
Sumptuary laws, materials, and the "natural" order Class,
intersectionalities, and industrial capitalism From textile to apparel
production: At home, in the factory, and in protest Class and fast fashion
Metaphors of class structure and change: The flows of fashion Status claims
and status demurrals 7. Gendering Fashion, Fashioning Gender: Beyond
Binaries Soft assemblages Marking, unmarking, and remarking gender Sex,
gender, and style-fashion-dress: Feminist deconstructions Theorizing the
body and style-fashion-dress Transgender studies through bodies and
style-fashion-dress Menswear out of the academic closet Multiple
masculinities Zoot suit La SAPE in Congo US National Survey of Male
Intersectionalities 8. Sexual Subjectivities and Style-Fashion-Dress
Sexual subjectivities Binary "beginnings" and reversals Homophobic
discourses On the protracted coming out of heterosexuality 1960s and 1970s:
Social movements and sexual fashions 1980s and beyond: Queering fashion
Gazing subjects and positionalities Sexuality through intersectionalities
9. Dressed Embodiment From phenomenology to dressed embodiment Abstracting
the body and representing embodiment Anthropometrics and sizing
Stigmatizing and celebrating fat bodies Sizeism and the fashion industry
Flaunting fat Dis/abled bodies Athletics and bodily exceptionalism
Addressing ableism Disabling environments and style-fashion-dress
Fashioning disability Concealment Diversion and reframing Modifying and
making Compensation Social uniqueness Social inclusion Embodied
subjectivities 10. Bodies in Motion Through Time and Space Time and space
(and place) Age/generation and place Fashion's way with time in space:
Spatiotemporalities Industrial time Anti/nonlinear time and space Nostalgia
Space-Time compression and "speed space" Uchronic temporality and utopian
spaces Closing/opening thoughts Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments 1. Fashion Studies and Cultural
Studies Articulation Style-fashion-dress The fields of fashion studies and
cultural studies Conceptualizing culture and fashion Circuit of
style-fashion-dress model Production Consumption Distribution Subject
formation Regulation 2. Intersectional, Transnational Fashion Subjects
Assumption 1: Structure-agency dynamics include processes of persuasion,
consent, and resistance. Assumption 2: Subject formation through
style-fashion-dress is a process of navigating intersectionalities.
Assumption 3: Structures of feeling - expressed through subject formation
and the fashion process alike - articulate between everyday life and
culture through the circuit of style-fashion-dress Ambiguity Cultural
Ambivalence Cultural Anxiety Assumption 4: The field of critical fashion
studies needs to move from identity nots to identity (k)nots Assumption 5:
Fashion is transnational - not merely western or "Euromodern" Assumption 6:
The process of negotiating ambiguity is not a level playing field, and it
is a material process - especially in a transnational context 3. Fashioning
the National Subject Nation ? essence Nation as different than:
Representing the other Folk costume, national dress and fashion Working the
hyphen: Nation-state and style-fashion-dress French Revolution Chinese
Cultural Revolution (and beyond) From European expansion to globalization
Decolonizing fashion: Beyond the metaphor Globalization Intersectionalities
and entanglements 4. Racial Rearticulations and Ethnicities Race and
ethnicity: Sliding signifiers Racial and ethnic rearticulations Color Hair
Ethnic re-articulations: Belongings-in-Difference Sliding into
appropriation, sliding into religion 5. Religion, Fashion, and Spirituality
Subject formation Spirituality, subjectivity, and materiality Modesty
Piety, orthodoxy, religiosity Regulation State alignment with religion
Freedom from religion Freedom of religion (religious freedom) Production,
distribution, and consumption The Jewish diaspora and the textile,
clothing, and retail industries The globalization of Muslim fashion 6.
Class Matters, Fashion Matters Conceptualizing class Caste systems
Sumptuary laws, materials, and the "natural" order Class,
intersectionalities, and industrial capitalism From textile to apparel
production: At home, in the factory, and in protest Class and fast fashion
Metaphors of class structure and change: The flows of fashion Status claims
and status demurrals 7. Gendering Fashion, Fashioning Gender: Beyond
Binaries Soft assemblages Marking, unmarking, and remarking gender Sex,
gender, and style-fashion-dress: Feminist deconstructions Theorizing the
body and style-fashion-dress Transgender studies through bodies and
style-fashion-dress Menswear out of the academic closet Multiple
masculinities Zoot suit La SAPE in Congo US National Survey of Male
Intersectionalities 8. Sexual Subjectivities and Style-Fashion-Dress
Sexual subjectivities Binary "beginnings" and reversals Homophobic
discourses On the protracted coming out of heterosexuality 1960s and 1970s:
Social movements and sexual fashions 1980s and beyond: Queering fashion
Gazing subjects and positionalities Sexuality through intersectionalities
9. Dressed Embodiment From phenomenology to dressed embodiment Abstracting
the body and representing embodiment Anthropometrics and sizing
Stigmatizing and celebrating fat bodies Sizeism and the fashion industry
Flaunting fat Dis/abled bodies Athletics and bodily exceptionalism
Addressing ableism Disabling environments and style-fashion-dress
Fashioning disability Concealment Diversion and reframing Modifying and
making Compensation Social uniqueness Social inclusion Embodied
subjectivities 10. Bodies in Motion Through Time and Space Time and space
(and place) Age/generation and place Fashion's way with time in space:
Spatiotemporalities Industrial time Anti/nonlinear time and space Nostalgia
Space-Time compression and "speed space" Uchronic temporality and utopian
spaces Closing/opening thoughts Bibliography Index
Studies Articulation Style-fashion-dress The fields of fashion studies and
cultural studies Conceptualizing culture and fashion Circuit of
style-fashion-dress model Production Consumption Distribution Subject
formation Regulation 2. Intersectional, Transnational Fashion Subjects
Assumption 1: Structure-agency dynamics include processes of persuasion,
consent, and resistance. Assumption 2: Subject formation through
style-fashion-dress is a process of navigating intersectionalities.
Assumption 3: Structures of feeling - expressed through subject formation
and the fashion process alike - articulate between everyday life and
culture through the circuit of style-fashion-dress Ambiguity Cultural
Ambivalence Cultural Anxiety Assumption 4: The field of critical fashion
studies needs to move from identity nots to identity (k)nots Assumption 5:
Fashion is transnational - not merely western or "Euromodern" Assumption 6:
The process of negotiating ambiguity is not a level playing field, and it
is a material process - especially in a transnational context 3. Fashioning
the National Subject Nation ? essence Nation as different than:
Representing the other Folk costume, national dress and fashion Working the
hyphen: Nation-state and style-fashion-dress French Revolution Chinese
Cultural Revolution (and beyond) From European expansion to globalization
Decolonizing fashion: Beyond the metaphor Globalization Intersectionalities
and entanglements 4. Racial Rearticulations and Ethnicities Race and
ethnicity: Sliding signifiers Racial and ethnic rearticulations Color Hair
Ethnic re-articulations: Belongings-in-Difference Sliding into
appropriation, sliding into religion 5. Religion, Fashion, and Spirituality
Subject formation Spirituality, subjectivity, and materiality Modesty
Piety, orthodoxy, religiosity Regulation State alignment with religion
Freedom from religion Freedom of religion (religious freedom) Production,
distribution, and consumption The Jewish diaspora and the textile,
clothing, and retail industries The globalization of Muslim fashion 6.
Class Matters, Fashion Matters Conceptualizing class Caste systems
Sumptuary laws, materials, and the "natural" order Class,
intersectionalities, and industrial capitalism From textile to apparel
production: At home, in the factory, and in protest Class and fast fashion
Metaphors of class structure and change: The flows of fashion Status claims
and status demurrals 7. Gendering Fashion, Fashioning Gender: Beyond
Binaries Soft assemblages Marking, unmarking, and remarking gender Sex,
gender, and style-fashion-dress: Feminist deconstructions Theorizing the
body and style-fashion-dress Transgender studies through bodies and
style-fashion-dress Menswear out of the academic closet Multiple
masculinities Zoot suit La SAPE in Congo US National Survey of Male
Intersectionalities 8. Sexual Subjectivities and Style-Fashion-Dress
Sexual subjectivities Binary "beginnings" and reversals Homophobic
discourses On the protracted coming out of heterosexuality 1960s and 1970s:
Social movements and sexual fashions 1980s and beyond: Queering fashion
Gazing subjects and positionalities Sexuality through intersectionalities
9. Dressed Embodiment From phenomenology to dressed embodiment Abstracting
the body and representing embodiment Anthropometrics and sizing
Stigmatizing and celebrating fat bodies Sizeism and the fashion industry
Flaunting fat Dis/abled bodies Athletics and bodily exceptionalism
Addressing ableism Disabling environments and style-fashion-dress
Fashioning disability Concealment Diversion and reframing Modifying and
making Compensation Social uniqueness Social inclusion Embodied
subjectivities 10. Bodies in Motion Through Time and Space Time and space
(and place) Age/generation and place Fashion's way with time in space:
Spatiotemporalities Industrial time Anti/nonlinear time and space Nostalgia
Space-Time compression and "speed space" Uchronic temporality and utopian
spaces Closing/opening thoughts Bibliography Index