A termék adatai:
ISBN13: | 9781350331921 |
ISBN10: | 1350331929 |
Kötéstípus: | Puhakötés |
Terjedelem: | oldal |
Méret: | 234x156 mm |
Nyelv: | angol |
Illusztrációk: | 70 colour illus |
688 |
Témakör:
Fashion in American Life
Kiadó: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Megjelenés dátuma: 2024. október 17.
Kötetek száma: Paperback
Normál ár:
Kiadói listaár:
GBP 24.99
GBP 24.99
Az Ön ára:
11 414 (10 871 Ft + 5% áfa )
Kedvezmény(ek): 13% (kb. 1 705 Ft)
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Hosszú leírás:
An original contribution to fashion studies, Fashion in American Life challenges existing approaches to fashion in America by considering who 'makes' fashion-when, where, and how. Avoiding the usual emphasis on the 'history of fashion' which perpetuates the myth of fashion designers, and New York, as the originators of American fashion, this exploration of the everyday allows us to see American fashion as a form of agency, self-identification, creative engagement, and politics.
Moving away from the well-trodden accounts of fashion designers and the dominance of New York, much of the fashion uncovered has been under-represented in previous accounts. Through contemporary and historical research, authors challenge the nature of both 'fashion' and 'America' by addressing the many complexities of a nation whose people have diverse histories and cultures, including stories and experiences that have been forgotten, marginalized and left out of the fashion 'canon'.
Race, gender, ethnicity, and class are employed as critical lenses to shed new light on how fashion might be defined and addressed within America (as a country, but not as a series of United States), with case studies looking at First Nations, Latinx and African American dress. The intellectual framing of the volume, and the methods and case studies included, also present tactics that can be applied to other contexts, making this book about revisiting 'fashion' more widely, not just in America. Fashion in American Life makes a unique contribution to the literature of fashion studies, fashion history, cultural studies, and beyond.
Moving away from the well-trodden accounts of fashion designers and the dominance of New York, much of the fashion uncovered has been under-represented in previous accounts. Through contemporary and historical research, authors challenge the nature of both 'fashion' and 'America' by addressing the many complexities of a nation whose people have diverse histories and cultures, including stories and experiences that have been forgotten, marginalized and left out of the fashion 'canon'.
Race, gender, ethnicity, and class are employed as critical lenses to shed new light on how fashion might be defined and addressed within America (as a country, but not as a series of United States), with case studies looking at First Nations, Latinx and African American dress. The intellectual framing of the volume, and the methods and case studies included, also present tactics that can be applied to other contexts, making this book about revisiting 'fashion' more widely, not just in America. Fashion in American Life makes a unique contribution to the literature of fashion studies, fashion history, cultural studies, and beyond.
Tartalomjegyzék:
List of Figures
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Fashion in American Life
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
Section One: Refashioning the Everyday
Introduction: Refashioning the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
1 Sovereignty Every Day: Mobilizing Indigenous Fashion from the Northwest Coast
Laura J. Allen
2 Haoles in Hawaiian Shirts
Andrew Reilly
3 "Smart Togs for Action": Everyday Clothes for Rural Women in Texas in the 1950s
Rebecca Jumper Matheson
4 Examining the Ordinary: Mourning Adornment and Black Death
Rikki Byrd
Section Two: Revisiting the Everyday
Introduction: Revisiting the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
5 Rags: The Birth of Personal Style in Print
Laura McLaws Helms
6 Playing Seminole Indian: The Cultural Appropriation of Seminole Men's Fashion
Amanda Thompson
7 Working from the Periphery: The National Association of Fashion and Accessories Designers (NAFAD) and the Promotion of Black Fashion
Einav Rabinovitch-Fox
8 Primitivizing Accessories: 'Slave Jewelry' and the Construction of White Femininity in 1920s America
Victoria Rose Pass
Section Three: Recovering the Everyday
Introduction: Recovering the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
9 Extra-ordinary Americans: Oral History, Workwear, and the U.S. Postal Service
Alison Bazylinski, Lynn Heidelbaugh, and Rachel Lifter
10 1970s Fashion and Women: Finding the Everyday at the Intersection of Image, Archive and Oral History
Alexis Romano
11 Preserving the Latinx Sartorial Experience Through Digital Archives
Michelle McVicker
12 Self-Fashioning, Participatory Research, and the "Will to Adorn"
Diana Baird N'Diaye
Index
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Fashion in American Life
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
Section One: Refashioning the Everyday
Introduction: Refashioning the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
1 Sovereignty Every Day: Mobilizing Indigenous Fashion from the Northwest Coast
Laura J. Allen
2 Haoles in Hawaiian Shirts
Andrew Reilly
3 "Smart Togs for Action": Everyday Clothes for Rural Women in Texas in the 1950s
Rebecca Jumper Matheson
4 Examining the Ordinary: Mourning Adornment and Black Death
Rikki Byrd
Section Two: Revisiting the Everyday
Introduction: Revisiting the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
5 Rags: The Birth of Personal Style in Print
Laura McLaws Helms
6 Playing Seminole Indian: The Cultural Appropriation of Seminole Men's Fashion
Amanda Thompson
7 Working from the Periphery: The National Association of Fashion and Accessories Designers (NAFAD) and the Promotion of Black Fashion
Einav Rabinovitch-Fox
8 Primitivizing Accessories: 'Slave Jewelry' and the Construction of White Femininity in 1920s America
Victoria Rose Pass
Section Three: Recovering the Everyday
Introduction: Recovering the Everyday
Hazel Clark and Lauren Downing Peters
9 Extra-ordinary Americans: Oral History, Workwear, and the U.S. Postal Service
Alison Bazylinski, Lynn Heidelbaugh, and Rachel Lifter
10 1970s Fashion and Women: Finding the Everyday at the Intersection of Image, Archive and Oral History
Alexis Romano
11 Preserving the Latinx Sartorial Experience Through Digital Archives
Michelle McVicker
12 Self-Fashioning, Participatory Research, and the "Will to Adorn"
Diana Baird N'Diaye
Index