Available Formats
Global Denim
By (Author) Daniel Miller
Edited by Sophie Woodward
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Berg Publishers
19th January 2011
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Sociology
Social and cultural anthropology
306.4
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
354g
On any given day nearly half the world's population is wearing blue jeans. This is entirely extraordinary. Yet there has never been a serious attempt to understand the causes, nature and consequences of denim as 'the' global garment of our world. This book takes up that challenge with gusto. It gives clear, if surprising, explanations for why this is the case, challenging the accepted history of jeans and showing why the reasons cannot be commercial.
While discussing the consequences of denim at the global level, the book consists of some exemplary studies by anthropologists of what blue jeans mean in a variety of local situations. These range from the discussion of hip-hop jeans in Germany, denim and sex in Milan through to the connection between denim and recycling in the US. But through all these intensively researched ethnographies of local denim we build our understanding of the most curious of all features of blue jeans - the rise of global denim.
An interesting and commendable first foray into an anthropology of blue jeans. * Anthropology Review Database *
As one product of the Global Denim Project (described in the first chapter), this book succeeds in enlightening readers about a mainstream fashion item that they may have taken for granted. The case studies of jeans in various contexts convince readers of the significance of denim and jeans in global and local terms. The book is recommended reading for university courses in sociology, material culture, culture studies, and fashion studies. -- Jana M. Hawley, University of Missouri, Columbia * Winterthur Portfolio, Winter 2012 *
Daniel Miller is Professor of Material Culture at University College London. He is the author of many books, including The Sari (with Mukulika Banerjee, Berg, 2004), Anthropology and the Individual (Berg, 2009) and The Comfort of Things (2009). Sophie Woodward is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Manchester and author of Why Women Wear What they Wear (Berg, 2007).