Queer cultures and lifestyles in the creative arts in Britain c. 1885-1967
In: Visual culture in Britain volume 18, issue 1 (March 2017)
39 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Visual culture in Britain volume 18, issue 1 (March 2017)
In: Dress cultures
In: Dress Cultures Ser.
Modest dressing, both secular and religious, is a growing trend across the world, yet so far it has been given little serious attention and is rarely seen as fashion. Modest Fashion uniquely studies and addresses both the consumers and the producers of modest clothing. It examines the growing number of women who, for reasons of religion, faith or personal preference, decide to cover their bodies and dress in a way that satisfies their spiritual and stylistic requirements. These are women who are making fashionable the art of dressing modestly. Scholars and journalists, fashion designers a
In: Gender, racism, ethnicity
In: The library of Ottoman studies 4
In: Gender & history, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 211-212
ISSN: 1468-0424
In: Fashion, Style & Popular Culture, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 193-207
ISSN: 2050-0734
Abstract
This article is an edited transcript of a conversation between Reina Lewis and film maker Campbell X recorded in London in 2015. The interview focuses on the racial, gender, and sexual politics of filmic representation and film production. A multi-award winning QTIPOC (queer trans intersex person of colour) filmmaker, based in London, Campbell's work has been instrumental in the development of queer British cinema. Centring on Campbell's 2012 feature film Stud Life, the article provides an historicised account of the development of Campbell's film practice, and examines the role of dress in the staging of LBGT characters and lives on screen. Providing insights into the process of costume design, casting, and film direction, Lewis and Campbell discuss the central role of dress, the body, and fashion in the visualisation of LGBT lives.
In: Postcolonial Studies, S. 459-472
In: Journal of Middle East women's studies: JMEWS ; the official publication of the Association for Middle East Women's Studies, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 58-90
ISSN: 1558-9579
Recently developed to serve the consumption needs of an emergent Islamic bourgeoisie, English-language Muslim lifestyle media depart from previous community media by including fashion as an integral part of the genre. Creating fashion editorial brings lifestyle publications up against internal debates about the representation of the female body and concepts of modesty. Central to this is the problem of what Muslim looks like, or what looks Muslim. The challenges faced by Muslim style intermediaries in staging a dressed body recognizable to readers as Muslim parallel those faced by the new queer lifestyle media established a decade previously. This paper draws on interviews with Muslim lifestyle journalists to explore how they negotiate internal community debates about female modesty while dealing externally with the mainstream fashion industry. These magazines strive to produce content that meets the needs of modesty and fashion in a context where Muslim women's dress is accorded hypervisibility by majoritarian cultures. The study raises questions about the relationship between marketability, fashion, and piety in the ongoing development of faith-based consumer cultures, evaluated in relation to critiques of neoliberalism's fostering of consumer subjects.
In: Cultural sociology, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 341-343
ISSN: 1749-9763
In: Cultural sociology: a journal of the British Sociological Association, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 341-343
ISSN: 1749-9755
Linking veils to fashion (and Islam to modernity), this article analyzes the presence of veiled assistants in London fashion shops as examples of spatial relations that are socializing and ethnicizing. In the anxious days after the 2005 bombs, the veiled body working in West End fashion retail moved through the postcolonial city in a series of fluid dress acts whose meanings were only partially legible to her different audiences. Connecting recent international Muslim lifestyle consumer cultures to gendered consumption in the development of Middle Eastern modernities, this article evaluates new British legislation protecting expressions of faith at work in relation to the role of veiled shop girls in postcolonial shopping geographies.
BASE
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Band 31, Heft 3, S. 880-884
ISSN: 1545-6943
In: Journal of colonialism & colonial history, Band 5, Heft 1
ISSN: 1532-5768
In: Feminist theory: an international interdisciplinary journal, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 211-219
ISSN: 1741-2773
In: Interventions: international journal of postcolonial studies, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 500-520
ISSN: 1469-929X