|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Relating to clothes is a fundamental experience in the lives of
most Western women. Even when choice is fraught with ambivalence,
clothing matters. From considerations about dressing for success,
to worries about weight, through to investing particular articles
of clothing with meaning bordering on the sacred, what we wear
speaks volumes about personal identity - what is revealed, what is
concealed, what is created.
This book fills a gap in the existing literature on the ambivalence
of fashion and dress by drawing on a wide range of women's
experiences with their wardrobes and providing empirical data
noticeably absent from other studies of women and dress. Navigating
what is clearly a contested realm in feminist scholarship,
contributors provide rich case studies of the reality of women's
relationships with clothing. While on the surface concerns about
fashion or dress may appear to reflect gendered patterns, in fact
clothing may be used to challenge ascribed meanings about
femininity.
The aim of this book is to provide an understanding of the ways in which gender is inscribed and reproduced through information and communication technologies (ICTs). An edited collection, it is organised in four sections: 'Identity and Self' examines transgender identities and the increasingly common phenomenon of gender switching in virtual reality. 'Gendered Access and Experience of ICTs and the Internet' looks at empirical research findings on gender and the internet and the complexity of women's experiences of technology. 'Leisure, Pleasure and Consumption' continues this theme within the leisure arena. 'Space, Time and Citizens in the Community' investigates such issues as computer ethics, women's information technology groups and the political economy of time in the information society. As yet there is relatively little published on women's activities in relation to new digital technologies. Virtual Gender brings together theoretical perspectives from feminist theory, the sociology of technology and gender studies with well designed empirical studies to throw new light on the impact of ICTs on contemporary social life.
Relating to clothes is a fundamental experience in the lives of
most Western women. Even when choice is fraught with ambivalence,
clothing matters. From considerations about dressing for success,
to worries about weight, through to investing particular articles
of clothing with meaning bordering on the sacred, what we wear
speaks volumes about personal identity - what is revealed, what is
concealed, what is created.
This book fills a gap in the existing literature on the ambivalence
of fashion and dress by drawing on a wide range of women's
experiences with their wardrobes and providing empirical data
noticeably absent from other studies of women and dress. Navigating
what is clearly a contested realm in feminist scholarship,
contributors provide rich case studies of the reality of women's
relationships with clothing. While on the surface concerns about
fashion or dress may appear to reflect gendered patterns, in fact
clothing may be used to challenge ascribed meanings about
femininity.
|
|