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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Shira Tarrant, Ph.D. , Marjorie JollesPublisher: State University of New York Press Imprint: State University of New York Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.526kg ISBN: 9781438443195ISBN 10: 1438443196 Pages: 273 Publication Date: 01 September 2012 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction: Feminism Confronts Fashion by Majorie Jolles and Shira Tarrant Part I. Dressing the Body: The Politics of Gender and Sexuality 1. Fashioning a Feminist Style, Or, How I Learned to Dress from Reading Feminist Theory by Astrid Henry 2. Dressing Left: Conforming, Transforming, and Shifting Masculine Style by Shira Tarrant 3. The Baby Bump is the New Birkin by Renee Ann Cramer 4. Fashion as Adaptation: The Case of American Idol by Leslie Heywood and Justin R. Garcia 5. My Mannequin, Myself: Embodiment in Fashion's Mirror by Denise Witzig 6. Life's Too Short to Wear Comfortable Shoes: Femme-ininity and Sex Work by Jayne Swift 7. Japanese Lolita: Challenging Sexualized Style and the Little-Girl Look by Kathryn A. Hardy Bernal II. Fashion Choices: The Ethics of Consumption, Production, and Style 8. Glam Abaya: Contemporary Emirati Couture by Jan C. Kreidler 9. Ado(red), Abhor(red), Disappea(red): Fashioning Race, Poverty, and Morality under Product (Red)(TM) by Evangeline M. Heiliger 10. The Lady Is a Vamp: Cruella de Vil and the Cultural Politics of Fur by Catherine Spooner 11. Something Borrowed, Something Blue: What's an Indie Bride to Do by Elline Lipkin 12. Steampunk: Stylish Subversion and Colonial Chic by Diana M. Pho and Jaymee Goh 13. DIY Fashion and Going Bust: Wearing Feminist Politics in the Twenty-First Century by Jo Reger 14. Stylish Contradiction: Mix-and-Match as the Fashion of Feminist Ambivalence by Marjorie Jolles About the Authors IndexReviews""...an engaging look at dress and its complexity in communication by utilizing contemporary examples and providing historical as well as current perspectives."" - Journal of Family & Consumer Sciences ""Fashion Talks brings together a diverse group of feminist thinkers, and raises questions that may challenge its readers to think of style and its offshoots in new ways."" - Sadie Magazine ""...Fashion Talks simultaneously examines the joy and subversive potential fashion holds ... This discomfort, this shaky ground where fashion and feminism converge-Tarrant, Jolles and their contributors open this space where we can channel our fashion choices-whether that be sneakers or heels, Prada or DIY, red lips or chapstick-for political progress."" - Bitch Magazine ""The contributors to this collection take fashion seriously, neither dismissing it as inconsequential nor demonizing it as inherently anti-feminist ... Quite simply, this book is an excellent and accessible introduction to the intersection between Third Wave feminism and fashion theory ... Highly recommended."" - CHOICE ""Think of this book as your contemporary style guide. With wit and verve, these fine thinkers redress fashion as a force both frivolous and profound, offering the kind of intelligent, entertaining analysis that transcends trendiness. Topics vary widely-think: baby bumps, little-girl looks, steampunk, colonial chic, feminism, fur, emirati couture. The result is an elegant mix-and-match that brings thoughtful consideration to everyday issues (like getting dressed!), while deepening understanding of our sartorial worlds."" - Deborah Siegel, author of Sisterhood, Interrupted: From Radical Women to Grrls Gone Wild ""From indie brides to Islamic abayas to emo-hipster style, Fashion Talks speaks volumes about the sophistication of contemporary feminist scholarship. Its essays bring together a wide range of different, occasionally divergent perspectives on how style has been applied, critiqued, analyzed, and of course donned for political ends, in ways that encourage readers to truly reconsider the popular slogan 'This is what a feminist looks like.' This book is an invaluable source of new scholarship on the subject that will have tremendous appeal to those interested in gender studies, popular culture, and their sartorial expression."" - Maria Elena Buszek, author of Pin-Up Grrrls: Feminism, Sexuality, Popular Culture """...an engaging look at dress and its complexity in communication by utilizing contemporary examples and providing historical as well as current perspectives."" - Journal of Family & Consumer Sciences ""Fashion Talks brings together a diverse group of feminist thinkers, and raises questions that may challenge its readers to think of style and its offshoots in new ways."" - Sadie Magazine ""...Fashion Talks simultaneously examines the joy and subversive potential fashion holds ... This discomfort, this shaky ground where fashion and feminism converge-Tarrant, Jolles and their contributors open this space where we can channel our fashion choices-whether that be sneakers or heels, Prada or DIY, red lips or chapstick-for political progress."" - Bitch Magazine ""The contributors to this collection take fashion seriously, neither dismissing it as inconsequential nor demonizing it as inherently anti-feminist ... Quite simply, this book is an excellent and accessible introduction to the intersection between Third Wave feminism and fashion theory ... Highly recommended."" - CHOICE ""Think of this book as your contemporary style guide. With wit and verve, these fine thinkers redress fashion as a force both frivolous and profound, offering the kind of intelligent, entertaining analysis that transcends trendiness. Topics vary widely-think: baby bumps, little-girl looks, steampunk, colonial chic, feminism, fur, emirati couture. The result is an elegant mix-and-match that brings thoughtful consideration to everyday issues (like getting dressed!), while deepening understanding of our sartorial worlds."" - Deborah Siegel, author of Sisterhood, Interrupted: From Radical Women to Grrls Gone Wild ""From indie brides to Islamic abayas to emo-hipster style, Fashion Talks speaks volumes about the sophistication of contemporary feminist scholarship. Its essays bring together a wide range of different, occasionally divergent perspectives on how style has been applied, critiqued, analyzed, and of course donned for political ends, in ways that encourage readers to truly reconsider the popular slogan 'This is what a feminist looks like.' This book is an invaluable source of new scholarship on the subject that will have tremendous appeal to those interested in gender studies, popular culture, and their sartorial expression."" - Maria Elena Buszek, author of Pin-Up Grrrls: Feminism, Sexuality, Popular Culture" ...an engaging look at dress and its complexity in communication by utilizing contemporary examples and providing historical as well as current perspectives. - Journal of Family & Consumer Sciences Fashion Talks brings together a diverse group of feminist thinkers, and raises questions that may challenge its readers to think of style and its offshoots in new ways. - Sadie Magazine ...Fashion Talks simultaneously examines the joy and subversive potential fashion holds ... This discomfort, this shaky ground where fashion and feminism converge-Tarrant, Jolles and their contributors open this space where we can channel our fashion choices-whether that be sneakers or heels, Prada or DIY, red lips or chapstick-for political progress. - Bitch Magazine The contributors to this collection take fashion seriously, neither dismissing it as inconsequential nor demonizing it as inherently anti-feminist ... Quite simply, this book is an excellent and accessible introduction to the intersection between Third Wave feminism and fashion theory ... Highly recommended. - CHOICE Think of this book as your contemporary style guide. With wit and verve, these fine thinkers redress fashion as a force both frivolous and profound, offering the kind of intelligent, entertaining analysis that transcends trendiness. Topics vary widely-think: baby bumps, little-girl looks, steampunk, colonial chic, feminism, fur, emirati couture. The result is an elegant mix-and-match that brings thoughtful consideration to everyday issues (like getting dressed!), while deepening understanding of our sartorial worlds. - Deborah Siegel, author of Sisterhood, Interrupted: From Radical Women to Grrls Gone Wild From indie brides to Islamic abayas to emo-hipster style, Fashion Talks speaks volumes about the sophistication of contemporary feminist scholarship. Its essays bring together a wide range of different, occasionally divergent perspectives on how style has been applied, critiqued, analyzed, and of course donned for political ends, in ways that encourage readers to truly reconsider the popular slogan 'This is what a feminist looks like.' This book is an invaluable source of new scholarship on the subject that will have tremendous appeal to those interested in gender studies, popular culture, and their sartorial expression. - Maria Elena Buszek, author of Pin-Up Grrrls: Feminism, Sexuality, Popular Culture Author InformationShira Tarrant is Associate Professor in the Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Department at California State University, Long Beach. She is the author of Men and Feminism and When Sex Became Gender and the editor of Men Speak Out: Views on Gender, Sex, and Power. Marjorie Jolles is Assistant Professor of Women's and Gender Studies at Roosevelt University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |