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Global denim / edited by Daniel Miller and Sophie Woodward.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford ; New York : Berg, [2011]Copyright date: ©2011Description: viii, 204 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1847886310
  • 9781847886316
  • 1847886329
  • 9781847886323
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.4 22
LOC classification:
  • GT2085 .G56 2011
Contents:
The making of an American icon: the transformation of blue jeans during the Great Depression / Sandra Curtis Comstock -- Diverting denim: screening jeans in Bollywood / Clare M. Wilkinson-Weber -- How blue jeans went green: the materiality of an American icon / Bodil Birkebæck Olesen -- The limits of jeans in Kannur, Kerala / Daniel Miller -- 'Brazilian jeans': materiality, body and seduction at a Rio de Janeiro's Funk Ball / Mylene Mizrahi -- Indigo bodies: fashion, mirror work and sexual identity in Milan / Roberta Sassatelli -- Jeanealogies: materiality and the (im)permanence of relationships and intimacy / Sophie Woodward -- Carrot-cut jeans: an ethnographic account of assertiveness, embarrassment and ambiguity in the figuration of working -class male youth identities in Berlin / Moritz Ege -- The jeans that don't fit: marketing cheap jeans in Brazil / Rosana Pinheiro-Machado.
Summary: 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.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Course reserves
SL Book City Campus City Campus Short Loan 2Hr 306.4 GLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A503355B

Fashion Design Practice II Full Year

SL Book City Campus City Campus Short Loan 2Hr 306.4 GLO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A503384B

Fashion Design Practice II Full Year

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The making of an American icon: the transformation of blue jeans during the Great Depression / Sandra Curtis Comstock -- Diverting denim: screening jeans in Bollywood / Clare M. Wilkinson-Weber -- How blue jeans went green: the materiality of an American icon / Bodil Birkebæck Olesen -- The limits of jeans in Kannur, Kerala / Daniel Miller -- 'Brazilian jeans': materiality, body and seduction at a Rio de Janeiro's Funk Ball / Mylene Mizrahi -- Indigo bodies: fashion, mirror work and sexual identity in Milan / Roberta Sassatelli -- Jeanealogies: materiality and the (im)permanence of relationships and intimacy / Sophie Woodward -- Carrot-cut jeans: an ethnographic account of assertiveness, embarrassment and ambiguity in the figuration of working -class male youth identities in Berlin / Moritz Ege -- The jeans that don't fit: marketing cheap jeans in Brazil / Rosana Pinheiro-Machado.

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.

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