Fashion in Altermodern China
By (Author) Feng Jie
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
30th November 2023
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
391.00951
Paperback
176
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Fashion in Altermodern China examines key features of womens fashion within the cultural and political context of contemporary China. While global brands and styles heavily influence Chinese consumer trends, the Chinese fashion system is formed of its own internal logics and emergent trends, too. Adopting the theoretical term altermodern, Feng Jie encourages us to view China in terms of its rapid modernization which presents its own rhythms and meanings, and argues persuasively that Chinese fashion cant be wholly understood in terms of a Western discourse of modernity, postmodernity and the global. Expanding our understanding of the fashion system, Fashion in Altermodern China takes on board new trends in global trade, new technologies, and the hybridity of designs and consumption of fashion. Through critical readings of Barthes, on the neutral, and Jullien, on blandness, both directly influenced by Asian philosophies, the author offers a new perspective on Chinese fashion, arguing that, while global-local contexts lead to identifiably postmodern and hybrid aesthetics, for women in contemporary China the flux and mix of available fashions is experienced in a more open neutral manner than scholars have previously described. Crucially, then, rather than position trends in China only in terms of hybridity (which betrays a Western bias and a binary logic of host-recipient), there are more fluid ways in which we need to understand how women engage in fashion in China today.
An eloquent, expansive, theoretically complex and yet also highly entertaining examination of Chinese fashion Through historical garments with contemporary forms like the qipao Feng eruditely traces larger socio-cultural shifts in China, particularly changing female identity and the complexities of contemporary Chinese womanhood. * Toby Slade, University of Technology Sydney, Australia *
Readers will love this study of fashion in China for its informed discussion of iconic developments in Chinas modern dress history Thoughtful in its approach, provocative in its hypotheses, it traverses the rocky terrain of politics and culture in an altermodern China as the author searches for a space in which fashion-in-China might be viewed on its own terms. * Antonia Finnane, University of Melbourne, Australia *
Feng Jie is Professor at Hainan University of China. She is the co-author of Art Aesthetics and Introduction of Art, and is a co-curator at Tate Exchange in Tate Modern; as well as the Director of the Neutral Institute.