Book description
This book provides a concise and much-needed introduction to the
sociology of fashion. Most studies of fashion do not make a clear
distinction between clothing and fashion. Kawamura argues that clothing
is a tangible material product whereas fashion is a symbolic cultural
product. She debunks the myth of the genius designer and explains,
provocatively, that fashion is not about clothes but is a belief. There
is an institutional structure, ignored by many fashion theorists, that
has shaped and produced the fashion phenomenon. Kawamura further shows
how the structural nature of the fashion system works to legitimize
designers creativity and can make them successful. Newer fashion cities,
such as Milan and New York, are the product of the fashion system that
originated in Paris. Without that systemic structure, fashion culture
would not exist. Fashion-ology provides a big picture approach that
focuses on the social process behind fashion and its perpetuation.
This book provides a concise and much-needed introduction to the
sociology of fashion. Most studies of fashion do not make a clear
distinction between clothing and fashion. Kawamura argues that clothing
is a tangible material product whereas fashion is a symbolic cultural
product. She debunks the myth of the genius designer and explains,
provocatively, that fashion is not about clothes but is a belief. There
is an institutional structure, ignored by many fashion theorists, that
has shaped and produced the fashion phenomenon. Kawamura further shows
how the structural nature of the fashion system works to legitimize
designers creativity and can make them successful. Newer fashion cities,
such as Milan and New York, are the product of the fashion system that
originated in Paris. Without that systemic structure, fashion culture
would not exist. Fashion-ology provides a big picture approach that
focuses on the social process behind fashion and its perpetuation.