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Sneakers: Fashion, Gender, and Subculture
By (Author) Yuniya Kawamura
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
21st December 2018
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Fashion and textile design
History of art
Material culture
Social and cultural anthropology
Gender studies, gender groups
Manufacturing industries
391.413
Paperback
168
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
346g
This is the first academic study of sneakers and the subculture that surrounds them. Since the 1980s, American sneaker enthusiasts, popularly known as sneakerheads or sneakerholics, have created a distinctive identity for themselves, while sneaker manufacturers such as Reebok, Puma and Nike have become global fashion brands. How have sneakers come to gain this status and what makes them fashionable In what ways are sneaker subcultures bound up with gender identity and why are sneakerholics mostly young men Based on the authors own ethnographic fieldwork in New York, where sneaker subculture is said to have originated, this unique study traces the transformation of sneakers from sportswear to fashion symbol. Sneakers explores the obsessions and idiosyncrasies surrounding the sneaker phenomenon, from competitive subcultures to sneaker painting and artwork. It is a valuable contribution to the growing study of footwear in fashion studies and will appeal to students of fashion theory, gender studies, sociology, and popular culture.
Finally, a book on sneakers for fashion scholars! No single item of clothing has played a larger role in American youth cultural history, and Kawamura does a brilliant job of recounting that history, contextualizing sneakers within the post-subcultural moment, and placing them in tension with larger debates in fashion studies. * Brent Luvaas, Drexel University, USA *
Its all about the sneaker! A fascinating look at the sneaker subculture phenomenon from a sociologists eye. Exploring complex sneaker codes relating to status, identity, peer recognition, fashion and gender politics it includes illuminating contributions from those enthusiasts and collectors, at the very heart of sneaker consumption. Well-illustrated, a definite must read. * Rebecca Shawcross, Northampton Museum, UK *
Kawamuras Sneakers convinces that a considered sociology of a single everyday object albeit an infamous commodity that solicits consumer madness and subcultural respect creates a worthy interdisciplinary global phenomenon called sneakerology. * Alison Gill, University of Western Sydney, Australia *
Yuniya Kawamura is Professor of Sociology at the Fashion Institute of Technology, State University of New York, USA. She is the author of The Japanese Revolution in Paris Fashion (Berg, 2004), Fashion-ology (Berg, 2005), Doing Research in Fashion and Dress (Berg, 2011), and Fashioning Japanese Subcultures (Berg, 2012).