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[Commlist] CFP: Sartorial Fandom: Fashion, Beauty Culture, and Identity
Fri Feb 01 14:50:44 GMT 2019
Call for Chapter Proposals for Anthology
Title: Sartorial Fandom: Fashion, Beauty Culture, and Identity
Editors: Elizabeth Affuso (Pitzer College) and Suzanne Scott (University
of Texas at Austin)
In recent years, geeks have become chic and the fashion and beauty
industries have responded to this trend with a plethora of
fashion-forward merchandise aimed at this audience. This cultural
ascendence can be seen in the glut of pop culture t-shirts lining the
aisles of big box retailers as well as the proliferation of geek culture
lifestyle brands and digital retailers over the past decade. While
fashion and beauty have long been integrated into the media industry
with tie-in lines, franchise products, and other forms of merchandise,
there has been limited study of fans’ relationship to these industries.
Fashion and beauty cultures are significant areas for study due to their
role as markers of identity and position as industries that prop up
forms of hegemony along the lines of race, gender, age, ability, size,
and so on. We are particularly interested in how fan fashion and beauty
cultures reflect larger socio-cultural trends related to normative
values, consumer culture, capitalism, and identity performance.
This collection seeks to think about fashion and beauty as related to
fandom across a range of modes of practice including retailers, branded
products, fan-made objects, and fandom of these. Fan fashion and
fan-oriented beauty products also offer a space to productively expand
what we consider to be a “fan object,” as media texts, musicians, sports
teams, celebrities, and retail lines all involve distinct forms of
sartorial fan expression. These forms of expression range from
purchasing and collecting to wearing and sharing (often via social
media) and frequently convey messages about imagined or desirable fan
identities, bodies, and demographics. This collection pointedly uses the
word “fashion,” rather than the more general designation of “fan
merchandise,” to acknowledge both the industrial specificities of the
fashion and beauty industries, as well as the cultural significance of
style. Just as Dick Hebdige and others have engaged subcultural style as
a politically charged space, this collection aims to address both the
affective and performative dimensions of fan fashion, as well as the
identity politics that inform sartorial expressions of fan identity.
Our goal is to explore how fan fashion has evolved over time, and how it
is performed in a wide array of fan communities and cultures, from early
fan magazines to sports arenas to comic book conventions to theme parks
to music venues. We also welcome considerations of digital incarnations
of fan fashion, from hair/make-up tutorial videos on YouTube to analyses
of specific social media accounts (e.g. Instagram, Tumblr) of fan
fashion influencers, brands, or subcultures. Centrally, essays in this
collection will explore how identity (broadly defined) intersects with
fan fashion and beauty culture as a consumer lifestyle brand.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
*
Historical approaches to fan fashion (or histories of fan-oriented
fashion and beauty products)
*
Fan cultures surrounding celebrity fashion and beauty lines (e.g.
Fenty, Yeezy, Ivy Park, Goop, etc.)
*
Fantrepreneurialism and fashion
*
Fashion and/as performance of fan identity (gender, class, age,
sexuality, and so on)
*
The legalities of fan fashion (licensing, copyright, trademark, etc.)
*
Fan culture retailers and lifestyle brands (Thinkgeek, Her Universe,
Jordandene, Espionage Cosmetics, etc.)
*
Fan fashion and merchandise subscription services (and unboxing or
“haul” videos)
*
Cosplay (or Everyday Cosplay, Disneybounding, etc.)
*
Auctions and fashion and/as memorabilia
*
Fan-centric Jewelry and Accessories (purses, hairbows, etc.)
*
Couture fan fashion and class
*
Identity and model selection for fan fashion lines
*
Fan lingerie and intimates
*
Fan-produced fashion (Etsy, crafting cultures, etc.)
*
Fan-oriented make-up and hair tutorials
*
Fan fashion shows
*
Fandom or geek culture as fashion “trend”
*
Fandoms around specific products or brands (sneakerheads,
hypebeasts, etc.)
Proposal guidelines:
*
Seeking essays of 5000-6000 words, inclusive of references
*
Proposals should contain the following:
o
Contributors’ contact information (name, title, affiliation,
email, highest degree obtained)
o
Chapter title
o
Chapter abstract of 250-500 words that illustrate the chapter’s
+
a) topic/subject matter
+
b) methodological approach
+
c) conclusions/argument
*
Proposals are due *March 1, 2019*.
*
Proposals or questions should be emailed to Elizabeth Affuso
((Elizabeth_Affuso /at/ pitzer.edu) <mailto:(Elizabeth_Affuso /at/ pitzer.edu)>)
and Suzanne Scott ((suzanne.scott /at/ utexas.edu)
<mailto:(suzanne.scott /at/ utexas.edu)>)
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