Book contents
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- Copyright page
- Contents for Volume II
- Figures for Volume II
- Maps for Volume II
- Table for Volume II
- Contributors for Volume II
- Preface
- Part IV Fashion, Modernism, and Modernity
- 21 Fashionable Masculinities in England and Beyond
- 22 Fashion in Capitalism
- 23 Fashion and Youth in Western Societies
- 24 Fashion and Time in China’s Twentieth Century
- 25 The Totalitarian State and Fashion in the Twentieth Century
- 26 Hollywood and Beyond
- 27 Fashion and Non-Fashion Cultures
- 28 Fashion and Hypermodernity
- Part V Fashion, Colonialism, and Post-Colonialism
- Part VI Fashion Systems and Globalization
- Index
- References
22 - Fashion in Capitalism
Another Modernity, 1800 to the Present
from Part IV - Fashion, Modernism, and Modernity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2023
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- The Cambridge Global History of Fashion
- Copyright page
- Contents for Volume II
- Figures for Volume II
- Maps for Volume II
- Table for Volume II
- Contributors for Volume II
- Preface
- Part IV Fashion, Modernism, and Modernity
- 21 Fashionable Masculinities in England and Beyond
- 22 Fashion in Capitalism
- 23 Fashion and Youth in Western Societies
- 24 Fashion and Time in China’s Twentieth Century
- 25 The Totalitarian State and Fashion in the Twentieth Century
- 26 Hollywood and Beyond
- 27 Fashion and Non-Fashion Cultures
- 28 Fashion and Hypermodernity
- Part V Fashion, Colonialism, and Post-Colonialism
- Part VI Fashion Systems and Globalization
- Index
- References
Summary
Whereas textiles, cloth, garments, and dress are seen as anthropological, supra-historical terms for concrete material covers of the human body, the more abstract term ‘fashion’ is defined in economic terms through its central place within the capitalist mode of production. This definition emerges from a historically and geographically particular nexus within Western industrialization and expands to fashion’s constituent role in capitalist socio-economic systems wherein social relations are based on commodities for exchange, private ownership of the means of production, and the exploitation of wage labour. Enshrined in bourgeois ideologies, capitalism has been flaunted, at least since the eighteenth century in the globalized North, as the dominant socio-economic form of production, established within a monetary system, and exported through colonialism and imperialism across the world.1
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Global History of FashionFrom the Nineteenth Century to the Present, pp. 766 - 800Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023