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[Commlist] Call for Papers: 'Dressing through Pandemics'
Fri Sep 01 17:38:57 GMT 2023
Special Issue Call for Papers: Fashion Style & Popular Culture
‘Dressing through Pandemics’
View the full CFP here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/fashion-style-popular-culture#call-for-papers
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/fashion-style-popular-culture#call-for-papers>
Guest Editor: Dr Elizabeth Kealy-Morris, Manchester Fashion Institute,
Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.
On 11 March 2020, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) was characterized
as a pandemic by the World Health Organization. Sixteen years earlier,
in February 2003, the SARS-CoV-1 (SARS) virus was identified during an
outbreak in China and declared a pandemic soon after. From its origins
in China in December 2019, COVID-19 quickly spread to the West where
there was little collective memory nor public health experience
containing a pandemic. To limit the transmission of the virus while
vaccines were still unavailable, lockdowns were imposed around the
world. Society was turned upside down in ways that often felt traumatic:
new ways of living, communicating, learning, working and dressing were
imposed overnight. Much has been written about important medical aspects
of both pandemics, but little discourse has been shared regarding the
ways in which fashion, style and popular culture were disrupted and
changed through pandemic experiences.
This Special Issue develops a multidisciplinary discourse which reflects
and extends awareness and appreciation for the ways in which the
pandemics altered and transformed our wardrobes, clothing consumption,
ways of dressing and even the purpose of clothing. Research would be
welcomed into the ways in which SARS, COVID-19 and other pandemics
brought a new appreciation of clothing as safety and shield, and
recognition that protective apparel manufacturing is an essential
industry to public health initiatives with moral imperatives to act
civically. Discussions into how lives lived online and in lockdown
changed behaviour towards how fashion was consumed and worn would be
valued. Additionally, the editor would appreciate research into the
differing behaviours and belief systems regarding medical mask wearing
in East Asian culture versus the West where mask wearing as a public
health initiative was unique to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Possible topics include but are not limited to:
*
Clothing and dress as protection/designing masks we want to wear
*
Home sewing PPE and communities of practice
*
Fashion brands’ remote experiential marketing and online shopping
*
Fashion houses dedicating machine time to PPE production
*
Developing a ‘waist up wardrobe’ for Zoom calls and the rise of
leisure wear during lockdown
*
Cloth is not neutral: The medical mask both as political symbol and
protective fashion accessory
*
The medical mask as a welcomed shield for people with facial
disfigurements and dermatological issues
*
Cultural attitude to medical mask wearing: Personal Protective
Equipment (PPE) versus Community Protective Equipment (CPE)
*
Lessons of the Spanish Flu pandemic: the medical mask introduced
into popular culture.
*
The troubled history of face coverings in the US – issues of racist
aggression, profiling, discrimination, and the effects on personal
health and public health initiatives
*
Case studies of knowledge transfer initiatives between sectors to
solve issues of design, supply, and distribution of Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE) kit
Full papers should be sent to Dr. Elizabeth Kealy-Morris, Manchester
Fashion Institute at
(E.Kealy-Morris /at/ mmu.ac.uk) <mailto:(E.Kealy-Morris /at/ mmu.ac.uk)> no later than
1 September 2024. All manuscripts are double-blind peer reviewed.
Papers will be accepted on a rolling basis and reviewed as such.
Questions regarding the journal should be sent to Principal Editor
Joseph H. Hancock II at (joseph.hancockii /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(joseph.hancockii /at/ gmail.com)>.
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