Fashioned Selves

Fashioned Selves
Author: Megan Cifarelli
Publisher: Oxbow Books Limited
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019
Genre: Clothing and dress
ISBN: 9781789252545

Presents a wide ranging examination of the social roles of dressed bodies in ancient contexts, texts, and images.

Advanced Style

Advanced Style
Author: Ari Seth Cohen
Publisher: powerHouse Books
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2012-10-30
Genre: Design
ISBN: 1576876314

Advanced Style is Ari Seth Cohen’s blog-based ode to the confidence, beauty, and fashion that can only be achieved through the experience of a life lived glamorously. It is a collection of street fashion unlike any seen before—focused on the over-60 set in the world’s most stylish locales. The (mostly) ladies of Advanced Style are enjoying their later years with grace and panache, marching to the beat of their own drummer. These timeless images and words of wisdom provide fashion inspiration for all ages and prove that age is nothing but a state of mind. Ari Seth Cohen started his blog inspired by his own grandmother’s unique personal style and his lifelong interest in the put-together fashion of vibrant seniors. Each of his subjects sparkles like a diamond after long years spent refining and perfecting their individual look and approach to life. The Advanced Style book will showcase, in luscious full-color, the best of the blog, but will also act as a true guidebook with all-new material featuring wardrobes, interviews, stories, and advice from a cadre of his most chic subjects, along with a large selection of never-before-seen photography—fresh off of sidewalk catwalks around the world!

The Fashioned Self

The Fashioned Self
Author: Joanne Finkelstein
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2013-04-24
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0745666264

This book examines the nature of the self and self-identity in the modern age, and the way in which they have been moulded through the alteration of bodily appearance, exemplified fashions, facelifts and diets. The idea that an individual's character is revealed through physical appearance is, Finkelstein argues, deeply embedded in Western culture. And since fashions and cosmetics are closely linked to sexual difference, the author concentrates on aspects of gender identity, suggesting that the female and male identity are differentiated through opposed experiences of the body.

The Fashioned Body

The Fashioned Body
Author: Joanne Entwistle
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 261
Release: 2015-03-03
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0745689396

The Fashioned Body provides a wide-ranging and original overview of fashion and dress from an historical and sociological perspective. Where once fashion was seen as marginal, it has now entered into core economic discourse focused around ideas about ‘cultural’ and ‘creative’ work as a major driver of developed economies. With a new preface and new material on the evolving fashion industry, this second edition gives a clear summary of the theories surrounding the role and function of fashion in modern society. Entwistle examines how fashion plays a crucial role in the formation of modern identity through its articulation of the body, gender and sexuality. The book offers a much needed synthesis between the literature on fashion and dress, and the sociology of the body, offering an updated critique of the issues raised in the first edition. Entwistle shows how an understanding of fashion and dress requires an understanding of the meanings acquired by the body in culture since it is the body that fashion speaks to and which is dressed in almost all social situations and encounters. She argues that while fashion refers to a specific system of dress originating in the west, all cultures ‘dress’ the body in the same way, making it a crucial feature of social order. Drawing on the work of theorists, the book offers insights into the connections that need to be made between the body, fashion and dress. The Fashioned Body will be an invaluable resource for anyone interested in the social role of fashion and dress in modern culture.

Dressed for Freedom

Dressed for Freedom
Author: Einav Rabinovitch-Fox
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 368
Release: 2021-11-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0252052943

Often condemned as a form of oppression, fashion could and did allow women to express modern gender identities and promote feminist ideas. Einav Rabinovitch-Fox examines how clothes empowered women, and particularly women barred from positions of influence due to race or class. Moving from 1890s shirtwaists through the miniskirts and unisex styles of the 1970s, Rabinovitch-Fox shows how the rise of mass media culture made fashion a vehicle for women to assert claims over their bodies, femininity, and social roles. She also highlights how trends in women’s sartorial practices expressed ideas of independence and equality. As women employed new clothing styles, they expanded feminist activism beyond formal organizations and movements and reclaimed fashion as a realm of pleasure, power, and feminist consciousness. A fascinating account of clothing as an everyday feminist practice, Dressed for Freedom brings fashion into discussions of American feminism during the long twentieth century.

Fashionable Nihilism

Fashionable Nihilism
Author: Bruce Wilshire
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 173
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0791488373

Thoreau wrote that we have professors of philosophy but no philosophers. Can't we have both? Why doesn't philosophy hold a more central place in our lives? Why should it? Eloquently opposing the analytic thrust of philosophy in academia, noted pluralist philosopher Bruce Wilshire answers these questions and more in an effort to make philosophy more meaningful to our everyday lives. Writing in an accessible style he resurrects classic yet neglected forms of inquiring and communicating. In a series of personal essays, Wilshire describes what is wrong with the current state of philosophy in American higher education, namely the cozy but ultimately suffocating confinements of professionalism. He reclaims the role of the philosopher as one who, like Socrates, would goad us out of self-contentedness into a more authentic way of being and knowing.

Paisley Burns Clubs 1805-1893

Paisley Burns Clubs 1805-1893
Author: Robert Brown (F.S.A., Scot.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 408
Release: 1893
Genre: Learned institutions and societies
ISBN:

Literature and Life

Literature and Life
Author: Edwin Percy Whipple
Publisher:
Total Pages: 374
Release: 1871
Genre: Authors
ISBN: