The Face of Fashion: Cultural Studies in Fashion

Front Cover
Routledge, 2003 M09 2 - 264 pages
First Published in 2004. "The Face of Fashion" is a study of fashion and the body which aims to establish the relations between codes and systems of clothing and the conduct of everyday life. Jennifer Craik questions the trickle-down theory that fashion is dictated by elite designers and opinion leaders with evidence of a trickle-up effect from sub-cultures, mass consumer behaviour and everyday bricolage of fashion items. The text addresses the neglected area of men's fashion, as well as women's fashion, within a broad examination of the role of fashion in gender identity. The argument is developed through a number of key agencies and processes: consumerism and everyday fashion; the iconization of the body through fashion models and photography; the use of cosmetics to "make-up" the body; the nexus between fashion and gender; the changing fashions in underwear and swimwear as maps of the revealed body. These topics are approached from an interdisciplinary perspective that treats fashion systems as ethnographic traces of the cultural projection of the body.
 

Contents

1 The face of fashion
1
2 Exotic impulses in techniques of fashion
17
3 Fashioning women
43
4 Fashion models
69
5 Soft focus
89
6 States of undress
112
7 Cosmetic attributes
149
8 Fashioning masculinity
170
9 Conclusion
197
Bibliography
217
Name index
232
Subject index
243

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Professor Jennifer Craik

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