From the rise of the Fashion Café to the phenomenon of the supermodel,
from House of Style to Unzipped, the world of fashion has taken center
stage in contemporary culture, for better or for worse. In turn,
although the idea of fashion has been in circulation since time
immemorial, not until recently has its profound and variegated
effects-on economic activity, on social and sexual mores, and on
aesthetic and psychological formulations-been fully considered.
With delicacy and wit, Fashion: An Introduction investigates the
different sides of recent debates over the production, marketing, and
consumption of fashion. Drawing on economics, art, psychology, commerce,
history, and the everyday, Joanne Finkelstein considers fashion in its
various guises-as body decoration and costume, as a language and a form
of display, as an expression of sexuality and as part of the urban
experience. In so doing, she has given us the perfect introduction to
fashion's social, economic, and aesthetic impact on the way we think and
act.