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Fashion: A Very Short Introduction
Rebecca Arnold
160 pages
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15 b&w halftone
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174x111mm
978-0-19-954790-6
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Paperback
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22 October 2009
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- A wide ranging account discussing everything from production and design, couture, and retailing to the wider role of fashion in society
- Covers the ethical and controversial aspects of fashion such as fur, exploitative trading, poor working conditions for labourers and ethical goods
- Rebecca Arnold is a highly regarded writer on 20th-century fashion
Fashion is a dynamic global industry that plays an important role in the economic, political, cultural, and social lives of an international audience. It spans high art and popular culture, and plays a significant role in material and visual culture. This book introduces fashion's myriad influences and manifestations. Fashion is explored as a creative force, a business, and a means of communication. From Karl Lagerfeld's creative reinventions of Chanel's iconic style to the multicultural reference points of Indian designer Manish Arora, from the spectacular fashion shows held in nineteenth century department stores to the mix-and-match styles of Japanese youth, the book examines the ways that fashion both reflects and shapes contemporary culture. Using
historical and contemporary examples, it gives a clear understanding of how fashion has developed since the renaissance, while raising questions about its status, ethical credibility, and influence on consumers.
The book provides insight into the structure of the fashion industry and how fashions are designed, promoted and consumed, in relation to relevant historical, social and cultural contexts. It is structured thematically, to look at the role and development of designers, the growth of shopping and the different businesses involved in making and selling fashionable clothes. Fashion's relationship to the wider culture is also explored, by considering its representation in art and collaborations between designers and artists, the moral controversies surrounding
fashion, and attempts to produce ethical clothing, and the effects of globalisation on the fashion trade.Readership: General readers, tutors and students for 'A' level textiles, art, and history of art, undergraduate students on fashion, textile design, history of art, and design courses. It could also appeal to those studying sociology and anthropology.
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Rebecca Arnold, Research Fellow, Department of History of Design, Royal College of Art, London, UK
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"Arnold summarises with caption brevity, and [I] admire both her research and her succinctness." - Vera Rule, The Guardian
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Introduction: What Is Fashion?
1: Designers
2: Art
3: Industry
4: Shopping
5: Ethics
6: Globalisation
Conclusion: The End of Fashion?
References
Further reading
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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