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[ecrea] International Journal of Fashion Studies 4.2
Mon Dec 04 21:19:44 GMT 2017
Intellect is delighted to announce that the new issue of the
International Journal of Fashion Studies
<http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/intellect/infs/2017/00000004/00000002>
is now available.
This special issue explores East Asian fashion as a multifaceted process
of cultural translation.
Articles within this issue include (partial list):
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24847/>
Dilute to taste: Kimonos for the British market at the beginning of the
twentieth century
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24847/>
Authors: Akiko Savas
Page Start: 157
This article investigates the significance of the kimono in British
fashion at the beginning of the twentieth century and clarifies who was
active in promoting its popularity throughout Britain. It also examines
the colour trends that developed for kimonos made for the British
market. In the early twentieth century, large numbers of kimonos
specially designed for the western market were exported to Britain by
Japanese manufacturers, such as Takashimaya, where they were sold in
shops and department stores in and around London. This made it
increasingly possible for anyone to easily obtain kimonos, in contrast
with the nineteenth century when collectors were the primary consumers
of kimonos. Thus, in British fashion history the phenomenon of the
‘Japan craze’ was most notable in the 1900s–10s. Not only does archival
evidence allow the export of kimonos to be tracked, it also demonstrates
how changes to the garment to suit foreign markets came about. According
to documented reports, the colours of kimonos needed to be ‘subdued’ for
the British market. This change proved to be a highly effective
‘translation’ in design as the kimono moved from Japanese culture to the
very different cultural language of British society.
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24850/>
Socialism and the fashion business: The case of China and Hong Xiang
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24850/>
Authors: Christine Tsui
Page Start: 225
This article explores how fashion businesses were transformed from
capitalist fashion firms to socialist fashion firms after the Communist
Party established the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949. By
exploring the case of the first Chinese fashion company, Hong Xiang,
through business records stored in the Shanghai Municipal Archive
Center, I argue that during the Mao era (1950s–1970s) the Chinese
government socialized fashion businesses in five key areas. It first
took over ownership of private businesses in the name of a ‘merger’,
while imposing a particular ideology in which working attitudes and
clothing represented people’s political attitudes towards the nation. In
clothing design, a set of dichotomies defined what was socialist dress
and what was capitalist dress: socialist design was simple, economic and
practical; capitalist design was complicated, luxurious and
over-decorated. In business management, the government encouraged the
Chinese to believe that socialist systems were better than anything
under capitalism by manipulating business information and offering
different interpretations of bourgeois business strategies. At a
micro-level, the socialist country meticulously manipulated particular
vocabularies to reflect the change of the system from capitalism to
socialism. This article re-examines this rich history to offer new
insights into the tensions and translations between capitalism and
socialism that occurred in the Chinese fashion business between the
1950s and the 1970s.
Fashioning tradition in contemporary Korean fashion
<https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=24851/>
Authors: Yunah Lee
Page Start: 241
This article reconsiders the debate of ‘self-orientalization’ in Asian
fashion within the context of contemporary Korean fashion and its place
in the promotion of the national economy and culture. Case studies of
Korean fashion labels such as Tchai Kim and Isae reveal that they have
challenged the typical images of hanbok, the traditional Korean dress,
and provided styles and brands that resonate with local Korean
characteristics as well as global fashion concerns. By reinterpreting
traditional shapes and purposes of hanbok, employing traditional
dressmaking methods and craft skills, and cleverly presenting and
promoting their products and brands, these fashion companies have
created a hybrid design and style. This has been built from the
development of complex and mutually reinforcing interactions between
local and global fashion knowledge and practice. This article argues
that these new movements in contemporary Korean fashion provide further
understanding of the complex and multifaceted dialectics of Korean
fashion, beyond the dichotomy of tradition versus modernity.
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