The Chinese Fashion Industry: An Ethnographic Approach
By (Author) Jianhua Zhao
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
3rd January 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Fashion and beauty industries
Fashion and textile design
History of art
Material culture
Social and cultural anthropology
391.00951
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
476g
Less than three decades ago, when the Chinese bought cloth or clothes, they would have had to use a government-issued coupon. Today the Chinese fashion industry is one of the most dynamic in the world - it not only supplies fashions to the increasingly discerning domestic market, but also provides one-third of the clothing sold in the global market. How did this phenomenal transition come about What can the growth of the Chinese fashion industry tell us about the post-Mao China What roles do the local and the global play in the dramatic changes This book offers a historically informed, ethnographically grounded and interpretive analysis of contemporary Chinese fashion and the fashion industry. It examines the interplay of state politics, market forces, local social and cultural factors, and the global political economy, both in the rise of the Chinese fashion industry and in the life and work of Chinese fashion professionals. As the first ethnographic account of the Chinese fashion industry in the post-Mao era, The Chinese Fashion Industry combines first-hand accounts with sophisticated cultural analysis to offer new insights, and will be of interest to students and scholars of fashion, anthropology and China.
The analyses are timely and important, and Zhao shows conclusively that many of our assumptions about fashion, the market, and modernization do not apply simplistically in the case of China. The book is short and readable and would be of interest to anthropologists working on material culture, globalization, and fashion and would be accessible to students and the general public. -- Jack David Eller * Anthropology Review Database *
Jianhua Zhao is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Louisville, USA.