Fashion Foundations: v. 30: Early Writings on Fashion and Dress (Dress, Body, Culture)

Fashion Foundations: v. 30: Early Writings on Fashion and Dress (Dress, Body, Culture)

by JoanneB.Eicher (Editor), KimK.P.Johnson (Editor), SusanJ.Torntore (Editor)

Synopsis

Although it can be difficult to think of fashion in anything other than a contemporary context, as a concept it is hardly new. Costume historians trace the birth of fashion back to the thirteenth century and writings on fashion date back as early as the sixteenth century when Michel de Montaigne pondered its origins, thereby setting in motion a chain of inquiry that has continued to intrigue writers for centuries. This key text reprints classic fashion writings, all of which have had a profound if perhaps untrumpeted impact on our understanding and approach to modern day dress - from the psychology of clothes through to collective fashion trends. Why do we wear clothes? What do they say about our self-awareness and body image? How can we 'fashion' new identities through what we wear? Seminal fashion statements by Montaigne, William Hazlitt, Herbert Spencer, Thorstein B. Veblen, Adam Smith, Herbert Blumer, and Georg Simmel answer these questions and many more. Full of vital fashion treasures that have often been ignored, this book fills a major gap in the history of the discipline and will serve as an essential teaching text for years to come.

$40.59

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Published: 01 Jun 2003

ISBN 10: 185973619X
ISBN 13: 9781859736197
Book Overview: Also available in hardback, 9781859736142 GBP50.00 (June, 2003)

Media Reviews
'It [Fashion Foundations] goes beyond the basic expectation of a book in the 'foundations' of a discipline that provides merely an understanding of the roots of current thought, and instead, as it is organized through current thematic concerns, allows a rethinking of the issues that govern current fashion theory in a manner that is generally interdisciplinary.' Sophie Woodward, University College for the Creative Arts/Nottingham Trent University, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (Vol 13, No 3, Sep 2007)
Author Bio
Kim K. P. Johnson is Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Design, Housing and Apparel, University of Minnesota. Susan J. Torntore is Assistant Professor, Textiles and Clothing, Iowa State University. Joanne B. Eicher is Regents' Professor, Department of Design, Housing and Apparel, University of Minnesota.