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[ecrea] International Journal of Fashion Studies 5.2 published
Wed Oct 17 13:48:50 GMT 2018
Intellect is delighted to share that the beautifully designed
International Journal of Fashion Studies 5.2 is available now! For more
information about the issue, click here >> https://bit.ly/2NJxBes
Special ‘Open Space’ Section: South Asian Fashion
Content
So far so good
Authors: Emanuela Mora And Agnès Rocamora And Paolo Volonté
Page Start: 285
Street-style geographies: Re-mapping the fashion blogipelago
Authors: Brent Luvaas
Page Start: 289
When street-style blogs – amateur web journals featuring photographs of
stylish pedestrians from around the world – began to pop up on the
Internet in 2005, they appeared to challenge the established geographic
hierarchies of the global fashion industry. Shot by fashion outsiders
with little formal training in photography, they featured a variety of
people and places far outside the purview of the industry. Drawing in
millions of readers, including trend forecasters, editors and designers
from within the industry, blogs seemed to be a democratizing force in
fashion, drawing attention to once peripheral fashion capitals like
Helsinki, Cape Town and Buenos Aires, and creating a backdoor into the
industry for their proprietors. But such a state of affairs could only
last so long. This article traces the evolution of street-style blogs
from the vantage points of several prominent street-style bloggers. As
it does so, it chronicles the geographic struggles operating within the
fashion ‘blogipelago’; the efforts of bloggers to expand the fashion
world map; and the efforts of industry insiders to draw attention back
to the established fashion capitals: New York, London, Milan and Paris.
The dressed body, material and technology: Rethinking the hijab through
sartorial sociology
Authors: Anna-Mari Almila
Page Start: 309
This article explores the opportunities provided to dress and fashion
studies by an analytical focus on garments through a number of
disciplinary and conceptual lenses. Drawing upon sociological sources,
including Bourdieu’s practice theory and Alfred Gell’s insights of
human/object agency, as well as anthropology, considerations of material
technologies and clothing physiology, a framework is developed for
depicting the many roles that textile materials and garment objects play
in knowledge-creation, individual experiences of wearing garments and
the operation of habitus. In my case study analysis of female Islamic
veiling in Finland, I draw upon both primary data and secondary sources
that take account of histories – involving individual histories,
socio-cultural histories, histories of technological and material
developments and histories of transnational trade routes – and
materialities, including the physicality of garments, human bodies and
physical and spatial environments.
Street style, smelling and hanging out: Experimental methods of fashion
research
Authors: Rosa Crepax
Page Start: 329
Feminist research of fashion, which is committed to understanding
women’s experience with style in all its multiplicity and richness, is
open to a variety of new interdisciplinary perspectives. Mirroring the
open-ended nature of the contemporary world and the vivacious and
fast-paced quality of the fashion scene, creative, experimental and
innovative methods of sociocultural research represent a crucial attempt
in capturing the diversity, variety and exceptionality of feminine
fashion. This article discusses a methodologically innovative case study
conducted for my research. It reflects on the feminist approach used in
the creative experimental exploration of women’s experiences with
fashion in everyday life, and on the contextual value of combining
uncommon methods of inquiry such as street-style photography, hanging
out, sketching and the collection of olfactory perceptions. Discussing
how this experimental methodology goes beyond both traditional
interviews and ethnography, the article draws attention to a series of
questions that arise from its development and application: how does the
emergence of innovative methods of fashion research respond to
contemporary changes in the fashion industry? How are these methods
influenced by the current fashion scene? How are they able to account
for it? What are the implications of their relationship in terms of
feminist research practice?
‘It’s like a souvenir of something that was important’: The role of
nostalgic memorabilia in psychological well-being
Authors: Christoph-Simon Masuch And Kate Hefferon
Page Start: 347
The identity-establishing powers of actively worn fashion, clothing and
dress have been widely explored by fashion scholars. However, the
phenomenological aspects of fashion, clothing and dress in general, and
the identity-establishing role of retained and treasured yet no longer
or only occasionally worn vestimentary objects, have only been
marginally explored. Based on data from a constructivist grounded theory
analysis on the relationship between well-being and clothing practices,
this study expands upon the findings of one particular theme, Eudaimonic
Well-Being, and the role of nostalgia and dress memorabilia in identity
formation. From semi-structured interviews with ten participants, two
additional subthemes were identified: Reminiscing about Past Selves and
Preserving Aspects of Self. These themes revealed that dress memorabilia
served as aides-memoires and were the storage media of complex,
self-relevant information spurring self-reflection. Furthermore, they
enabled the positively framed reconsideration of past selves as well as
the integration of aspects of past selves into the self-concept.
Findings from this study are contextualized and integrated into existing
phenomenological works on fashion, clothing and dress. Finally, the
concept of dress nostalgia is furthermore developed and future routes
for subsequent research are suggested.
Evolution versus entrenchment: Debating the impact of digitization,
democratization and diffusion in the global fashion industry
Authors: Taylor Brydges And Brian J. Hracs And Mariangela Lavanga
Page Start: 365
In the report The State of Fashion 2017, written by Business of Fashion
and the McKinsey Institute (2016), industry executives used three words
to describe the current state of the fashion industry: uncertain,
changing and challenging. Indeed, the fashion industry is undergoing
dramatic transformations, from digitization and the rise of ‘see now,
buy now’ fashions, to brands redefining the function and timing of
fashion weeks, and increasing levels of global integration and
competition (Crewe 2017). As such, the fashion industry has been
recognized as a valuable lens through which to explore significant and
ongoing changes to the production, curation and consumption of goods,
services, and experiences (Brydges et al. 2014; Brydges 2017; D’Ovidio
2015; Hracs et al. 2013; Lavanga 2018; McRobbie 2016; Pratt et al. 2012).
Drawing inspiration from this stream of scholarship, we organized four
sessions titled Trending Now: The Changing Geographies of Fashion in the
Digital Age at the Royal Geographical Society and Institute of British
Geographers (RGS-IBG) conference in London, 30 August – 1 September
2017. In these sessions, researchers and practitioners from a wide range
of locations and disciplines – including fashion studies, media studies,
cultural economics, business and geography – came together to share
research related to the structures, labour dynamics, spaces, value
propositions and practices of the contemporary fashion industry.
While a range of issues were discussed, the sessions were connected by
an overarching theme. Namely, the extent to which power in the fashion
industry is expanding or consolidating. While there is a prominent
discourse that states that structures, systems and spaces within the
global fashion industry have been (and will continue to be) disrupted by
new actors, technologies, practices and cities, we collectively
questioned whether the fashion industry has really entered an era of
democratization, or if established power structures remain entrenched.
Through empirical case studies from a variety of geographic contexts –
from India to Italy – about different actors and activities within the
industry, each presentation contributed new evidence and perspectives to
this debate. The discussion below distils some of the key themes that
emerged.
DKNY – city connection: The impact of New York City on the brand and the
designer
Authors: Sanem Odabaşi
Page Start: 373
Countries and cities are influential in the formation of brands and the
identity of designers, as well as being areas that shape creative
thinking. The relationships that fashion designers have with their
geographies influence and differentiate their creative power and production.
New York, Tokyo, London, Milan and Paris are renowned as the five
‘fashion capitals’, and all are known for their distinct fashion style.
Paris, for instance, is defined through its haute couture while London
is associated with avant-gardism and quirkiness and ‘New York’ often
signifies casual ready-towear designs for the urban businesswoman
(Loschek 2009; Rocamora 2009). The nature of a place affects what
products can actually proliferate, and since places do differ from one
another, so too do the products differ depending on where they are
produced (Molotch 2003: 157).
Introduction: Continuing the dialogue on South Asian fashion studies
Authors: Lipi Begum
Page Start: 383
Handcraft as luxury in Bangladesh: Weaving jamdani in the twenty-first
century
Authors: Sonia Ashmore
Page Start: 389
The practice of making things by hand in the Indian subcontinent is
centuries old. Many, if not most, artefacts were handcrafted until the
late twentieth century and some are still. From handwoven textiles made
from handspun and hand-dyed cloth, printed and embroidered by hand; to
brass water pots beaten out by hand, making a deafening noise, and
handloom carpet weaving in the Indian town of Mirzapur, Uttar Pradesh.
Many of these crafts and their associated livelihoods are now almost
extinct or under threat (Radzan 2007). By the late seventeenth century,
Bengal in Western India had become the centre of a worldwide silk and
cotton textile trade, notably in the largescale hand production of
muslin and jamdani – exceptionally fine plain and figured woven cottons
made specifically in the area around Dhaka, capital of independent
Bangladesh since 1971. In the late eighteenth century, Dhaka, then part
of Bengal, also had royal workshops devoted to producing fine cotton
muslins exclusively for royal consumption (Latif 1997: 43). A length of
Mulmul khas, or ‘special muslin’, measuring 22 yards by one yard (20.11
× 0.91 metres) took up to six months to weave. It could only be made
when the air was moist enough to prevent the fibres from breaking. With
a drastic decline in fine handweaving, however, the exceptional textile
traditions of Bangladesh today are precarious. This article focuses on
the situation of jamdani weaving, indigenous to a specific geographical
area now in Bangladesh; it argues that the survival of traditional
muslin and jamdani making has to be considered not as a ‘folk craft’,
but as the production of the refined luxury fabric it was historically.
While there are other traditional textiles being made by hand in
Bangladesh today, this short article will focus on the handweaving of
jamdani.
Sartorially weaving their way through bhodrota (respectability):
Georgette sarees, bangles and selling sex in a Kolkata neighbourhood
Authors: Mirna Guha
Page Start: 399
In this excerpt, I unpack my field notes from the day to reveal the ways
in which female sex workers in Kalighat, a red-light area embedded in a
middleclass neighbourhood in Kolkata, West Bengal, India, negotiate
middle-class norms of respectability and female propriety. Specifically,
I focus on how the women navigate and manipulate sartorial norms which
are imposed on them and their work to their social and economic advantage.
Visual fashion landscapes: Gender and class in Lollywood billboard
advertising
Authors: Hena Ali
Page Start: 407
Book Reviews
Authors: Dina Khalifa And Margarita Estévez-Saá
Page Start: 417
Luxury Indian Fashion: A Social Critique, Tereza Kuldova (2016, first
edition)
Fashion, Dress and Identity in South Asian Diaspora Narratives: From the
Eighteenth Century to Monica Ali, Noemi Pereira-Ares (2018, FIRST EDITION)
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