Referat What Is Fashion
Mai jos puteti citi fragmente din
Referat What Is Fashion si de asemenea puteti face
Download Referat What is FashionCiteste fragmente din Referat What Is Fashion
What is Fashion?
For centuries individuals or societies have used clothes and other body
adornment as a form of nonverbal communication to indicate occupation,
rank, gender, sexual availability, locality, class, wealth and group
affiliation. Fashion is a form of free speech. It not only embraces
clothing, but also accessories, hairstyles, beauty and body art. What we
wear and how and when we wear it, provides others with a shorthand to
subtly read the surface of a social situation.
Fashion as a Sign System
Fashion is a language of signs, symbols and iconography that
non-verbally communicate meanings about individuals and groups. Fashion
in all its forms from a tattooed and pierced navel, to the newest
hairstyle, is the best form of iconography we have to express individual
identity. It enables us to make ourselves understood with rapid
comprehension by the onlooker.
Fashion as a Barometer of Cultural Changes
How we perceive the beauty or ugliness of our bodies is dependant on
cultural attitudes to physiognomy. The accepted beautiful female form
that Rubens painted is subliminally undesirable nowadays, if we are to
be thought beautiful in a way that the majority accepts in the 21st
century.
Today an inability to refashion and reshape our bodies whilst constantly
monitoring the cultural ideal leaves us failing the fashion test. Those
that pass the fashion test invariably spend their lives absorbed in a
circle of diet, exercise, cosmetic surgery and other regimes. This
includes the rigors of shopping in search of the ultimate garb.
The Need for Tribal Belonging
Our reluctance to give ourselves a regular makeover through diet,
exercise, and consistently conscious use of specific dress styles infers
that we have the personality flaws of a weak willed human. We become in
the eyes of fashion aficionados somewhat inadequate and imperfect in the
fashion stakes. Thus we strive to keep a culturally satisfying
appearance so that we feel better, whereas in fact we are striving to
stay in the tribe, whatever type of tribe that may be.
Group affiliation is our prime concern with regard to fashion. As long
as some group similarity is identified within the group, our personal
fashion whether current or dated can belong to any tribe. It is the
sense of belonging marked by how we fashion ourselves that gives us the
tribal connection.
Rôles
An innate characteristic of human beings is the desire to strive for
differentiation. The removal of Sumptuary Laws and rigid dress codes has
enabled the individual to use fashion as a means to identify clearly the
many different rôles that a person plays in any one day.
Sociologists borrowed the word rôle from the theatre because, like
actors individuals play many parts and each part has to be learnt.
Rôles are continually learned and rehearsed and relearned. They are
also shared, because like the actors on a stage, fluid interaction only
occurs if all the performers know the behaviour expected.
Class Stratification
The Edwardians were experts in the art of rôle play. They had had
sufficient time to readjust to the new patterns of behaviour established
by the Victorians.
The Edwardians were socially stratified into those who wore tailor made
clothing down to those who wore other people s cast offs. The poor
simply looked poor, because their raiment betrayed them. Whilst the rich
and nouveau riche displayed their wealth through an iconography of signs
and symbols that enhanced their body image in the eyes of those that saw
themselves as socially inferior.
Rôle Set
Rôles and activities are closely linked to what people wear. People are
affected by their rôle-set, which includes boyfriends, girlfriends,
sisters, brothers, friends, husbands, lovers, mothers, fathers,
grandparents, relatives, employers, customers, clients, work mates,
business colleagues, peer and age groups.
The people with whom a purchaser interacts affects the final purchase
and this applies to any fashion dominated item from interior furnishings
to choice of cars. Likewise the purchase of fashionable clothes,
fabrics, or accessories becomes a visual currency and speaks volumes
silently. The tools of fashion provide the signs and symbolism that
function as an information service for the rôle-set.
People are so aware that others make judgements about them through their
clothes and accessories that many run up huge debts to appear to belong
to a particular lifestyle. Frequently the rest of their rôle-set are
doing likewise. Members of the rôle-set often encourage them. Only
individuals with a strong sense of self identity stick their necks out
and admit to wearing items that others might consider dubious or passé.
Occupation, Status and Purpose of Clothing
Those with high status occupations will wear the clothes they think
others expect them to wear. They will not wish to experience rôle
conflict by wearing the incorrect clothing. It is from the clothes a
person wears that we get our first impression of personality. They
provide mental clues to a person s status and occupational rôle, as
well as being a means of conforming to peer group expectations.
Clothes also have the utilitarian function of providing both protection
from the extremes of the elements, keeping us warm or cool or safe. They
also act as an aid to modesty or immodesty as the wearer so desires.
The state of a person s clothes is synonymous with self respect and is a
sign of respectability. It also adds another sign that the person has
sufficient status in society to maintain at the cost of time and money,
laundering, dry cleaning and repair. To be respectable some expense has
to be incurred in the maintenance of cleanliness and neatness.
Veblen s The Theory of the Leisure Class
Thorstein Veblen the US economist who wrote the book The Theory Of The
Leisure Class in 1899 maintained that Dressing for status as an outward
expression of wealth is indeed functional, by the very fact that such
clothes prevent the wearer from engaging in manual labour. Also because
of their restrictive design they need the assistance of others to dress
the wearer and keep clothes in pristine condition.
Veblen devoted a whole chapter of his book to Dress As An expression
Of The Pecuniary Culture .
He wrote ...our apparel is always in evidence and affords an indication
of our pecuniary standing to all observers at first glance...dress,
therefore, in order to serve its purpose effectively should not only be
expensive, but it should also make plain to all observers that the
wearer is not engaged in any kind of productive labour...
Foremost in Veblen s mind must have been the fashions of the 1890s a
decade that gradually favoured increasing conspicuous consumption by the
rich. A century later the vogue for power dressing in the 1980s saw
excessive indulgence and conspicuous consumption in fashion. Fashionable
behaviour was the epitome of conspicuous waste, but the purest form of
relief in a stressed, angst ridden society.
Status Symbols
One of the most favoured forms of semiotic distinction is fashion,
because fashionable clothes, accessories and body adornment are easy for
others to observe at glance. Incidental items, particularly branded
specific handbags footwear, jewellery, accessories and new hairstyles
act also as important status symbols.
First - a fashion is approved by others.
Then - it is copied because of competition.
Finally - it is replaced as it becomes commonplace and has ceased to
fulfill its function of being distinctive.
The status fashion can be anything from a particular jewel such as
solitaire diamond stud earrings or the latest fad for long drop gold
earrings to a brand logo pair of jeans in a particular style and colour.
The ability to decode trends that are not deliberate and obvious is
limited to a small group who adopt consumer items early. HYPERLINK
"http://www.qksrv.net/click-1259693-3216122"
Wearing a Uniform
Some people instinctively know how to appear respectable to the majority
through their clothing. Others are less obviously successful in
attaining consistently reliable grooming. The rise of the Corporate
Uniform adopted by banks and similar institutions in the 1980s
reinforced power dressing. It indicated how important the uniform is as
a means of distinguishing one person from another instantly. Uniforms
provide us with mental clues.
Occupational Uniform
Wearing an occupational uniform puts an employee in the position of
being a visual metaphor. We learn quickly to associate different
uniforms with different rôle conceptions and different rôle
expectations. We connect the policeman or security guard s uniform with
authority, law, order and help. Likewise we associate the nurses or
paramedic s uniform with help, care, protection and mothering. By
contrast the jaunty overall and hat of the ice cream vendor with the
promise of pleasure.
When people put on a uniform they adopt what they think it symbolises,
but even people who don t wear a specific occupational or leisure
uniform tend to know vaguely what to wear. Those who adapt their
wardrobe to “fit in†with their company, succeed much faster in
terms of upward job mobility.
Mass Youth Uniform
Young people in particular adopt the uniform of their peer group.
However the uniform must be the peer group s uniform, not one imposed on
them by adults. Fashion in the form of a mass youth uniform can create a
sense of belonging to the peer group and a feeling of identity as the
adolescent personality reaches maturation.
For the majority, an old status symbol, be it a brand, a logo or
attitude accessory is old-fashioned the moment is loses favour within
the group. An up to date status symbol cries out to some "I must have it
now". The mobile phone as a belt accessory was a perfect example of
this. As new products develop, last year s non WAP mobile phone version
is passé. It is essential to have the latest fashion accessory, to gain
instant peer approval
Mass Production and New Textile Technology
Between the first and second World Wars mass production of clothing
truly developed. But it was not until clothes rationing was introduced
in the UK that production methods became more streamlined. Rationing of
cloth and haberdashery, along with strict specifications ensured
manufacturers created garments in a speedy, efficient, economic manner
whilst attaining a certain standard of quality control. By the 1950s
increasing numbers of women abandoned the little dressmaker and bought
from the increasing majority of chain stores.
Department stores like Debenhams continued to move with the times
experimenting with new fabrics and new looks. By the 1990s were using
designers like Jasper Conran to design ranges with style and flair.
A whole range of exciting yarns, new fashion fabrics, protective
materials and engineered fabrics became widely available after 1960. New
materials and fabric finishing techniques are at first exclusive and
expensive. Initially they are offered to the world of Haute Couture. A
couple of years later they filter to the mass market.
Youth Cult in the Global World
The youth cult of the teenager in the 1950 s became a major force in
the1960s. Other contributing influences were the glamour of the cinema,
the television in ordinary homes and a change in attitudes and values
after the introduction of the female birth pill. Global coverage of the
mood of society was absorbed from the cinema, television and fanzine
magazines. The world had instant access to the latest trends and
fashions as fast as the picture could be transmitted.
Today what people see in their homes on television or when surfing the
Internet soon becomes accepted very quickly as normal and everyday. In
the comfort of one s own home the television monitor scales down the
stark newness of an idea, especially the impact of a fashion concept and
this makes it easier for us to accept more quickly when worn by others
even if we can t see ourselves wearing a similar item.
Fashion Cycles
The young have not always been dominant in fashion history. Until the
Victorian Era a fashion look took between 10 and 15 years to permeate
country areas. Once rail travel improved mass communication between
country and city, the cycle of fashion speeded up so fast, that by the
Edwardian Era in 1901, fashion was moving in a yearly cycle.
Emancipation of Women and the contribution of all classes of women to
the 1914 – 1918 war enabled and encouraged women to adopt more
practical clothing and to try out new styles in fashion, hair and
beauty.
By the millennium everyday changes in lifestyle included fitness and
health pursuits, car and air travel and centrally heated environments in
homelife. All created a need for clothing fashion designed for the way
we live now. How we perceive our persona and what we want to say to
society in a very visual camera obsessed culture, is still expressed
through our bodies, the way we wear clothes, jewellery and body art.
Today fashion and beauty can be affordable for everyone. There is always
a range such as Avon that provides quality beauty, make up and accessory
products at a prices most can afford.
Bogdan Ardeleanu
Clasa a VII-a E1
Page PAGE 6 of NUMPAGES 6
ì¥Â