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Fashioning Professionals
Identity and Representation at Work in the Creative Industries
Fashioning Professionals
Identity and Representation at Work in the Creative Industries
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Description
From artist to curator, couturier to fashion blogger, 'creative' professional identities can be viewed as social practices, enacted, performed and negotiated through the media, the public, and industry. Fashioning Professionals addresses what it means to be a creative professional, historically and in the digital age, as new ways of working and doing business have given rise to new professional identities.
Bringing together critical reflections from international researchers, the book spans fashion, design, art, architecture, and advertising. It examines both traditional and emergent roles in creative industries, from advertising executives and surrealist artists to mannequin designers, pop stylists, bloggers, makers and design curators. The book reveals how professional identities are continually in a state of fashioning, through style, taste, gender and cultural representation, highlighting moments of friction and flux in the creative labour of the global economy.
Interweaving critical perspectives from fashion and design history with sociology and cultural theory, Fashioning Professionals addresses a burgeoning area of research as we enter new terrain in fashion and the creative industries.
Table of Contents
List of Contributors
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Fashioning Professionals: History, Theory and Method
Leah Armstrong and Felice McDowell
I. Inventing
1. Media in the Museum: Fashioning the Design Curator at the Boilerhouse Gallery, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Liz Farrelly
2. Fashioning Pop: Stylists, Fashion Work and Popular Music Imagery, Rachel Lifter
3. The Labor of Fashion Blogging, Agnès Rocamora
II. Negotiating
4. Fashioning Professional Identity in the British Advertising Industry: The Women's Advertising Club of London, 1923-1939: 95-114, Philippa Haughton
5. Satirical Representations of the Bauhaus Architect in Simplicissimus Magazine: 115-133, Isabel Rousset
6. The Self as an Art-Work: Performative Self-Representation in the Life and Work of Leonor Fini: 134-155, Andrea Kollnitz
III. Making
7. Designer Unknown: Documenting the Mannequin Maker, June Rowe
8. Fashioning the Contemporary Artist: The Spatial Biography of Sue Tompkins, Caroline Stevenson
9. The Maker 2.0: A Craft-Based Approach to Understanding a New Creative Identity, Catharine Rossi
Index
Product details
| Published | 08 Feb 2018 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 224 |
| ISBN | 9781350001855 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 21 bw illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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An excellent resource for scholars who are interested in fashion, representation, and identity ... Provides insight into the fragile, and fluctuating nature of in the creative industries and as such, will be of interest to readers from a variety of fields.
The Journal of Dress History
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Pulling together far reaching ideas with the concept of “fashioning,” the authors open the analysis beyond the usual suspects of dress, the fashion system, or self-expression ... the essays collected here will please and challenge readers from a broad swathe of scholarly fields.
from the Foreword by Elizabeth Wissinger, Professor of Sociology, City University of New York, USA
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Exploring design, fashion, architecture, and art, this series of essays offers new and provoking insights into shifting conceptions of professional identities in the creative industries.
Cheryl Buckley, University of Brighton, UK
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
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