1 – Do Clothes Speak? What Makes them Fashion?
p.4 – sociological interest in clothing and fashion: we know that through clothing people communicate some things about their persons, and at the collective level this results typically in locating them symbolically in some structured universe of status claims and life-style attachments.
2 – Identity, Ambivalence, Fashion’s Fuel
“For the truth of the matter is that people have mixed feelings and confused opinions and are subject to contradictory expectations and outcomes, in every sphere of experience.” (Donald N. Levine, The Flight form Ambiguity, Chicago: UP, 1985)
p.21 – collective identity ambivalence is an important cultural source of the code changes in clothing that are fashion. This generalized cultural source is also a key resource for fashion designers in the practice of their craft. Ambivalences of gender, social status, and sexuality draw repeatedly on this formulation.
Although the two terms are accorded rather distinct dictionary definitions (ambiguity alludes to multiple meanings, while ambivalence points more to contradictory and oscillating subjective states), they are commonly confounded in everyday speech.
3 – Ambivalence of Gender: Boys will be Boys, Girls will be Boys
p.33 – The history of Western fashion is marked by a profound symbolic tension arising from the desire, sometimes overt though more often repressed, of one sex to emulate the clothing and associated gender paraphernalia of the other. Until well into the eighteenth century the habit of cross-gender emulation in dress was somewhat more pronounced on the male side in the privileged classes than on the female. (The common people were for the most part excluded from fashion’s orbit until the nineteenth century.)
9 – Conclusion, and some Afterthoughts
p. 198-99 – fashion can serve as “a vehicle for the broadening of minds” because it can “initiate persons into realms of thought and experience that could otherwise have bypassed them. Some of this can be attributed to the circumstance that the molders of fashion, whatever area they work in, are persons who often are in close contact with leading creative and progressive elements in the arts, sciences, politics, and culture generally.”