(Re)Dressing American Fashion
Wear as Witness
Emma McClendon editor Lauren Downing Peters editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Yale University Press
Publishing:25th Mar '25
£30.00
This title is due to be published on 25th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
A revelatory new approach to understanding fashion in America that focuses on the stories told by worn, imperfect, and ordinary clothes
Expanding the history of American fashion, this volume highlights garments that carry material traces of everyday wearers’ bodies, such as stains, rips, tears, mending, and signs of hand-craftsmanship. In-depth examinations of ten case-study objects—ranging from activist Jae Jarrell’s Urban Wall Suit (ca. 1969) to an unknown child’s pair of sneakers found at a migrant pickup site in the Sonoran Desert (2009–10)—reveal the ways worn objects are witnesses to American history.
By foregrounding worn, ordinary, and imperfect garments, the essays in this volume respond to the fact that histories of American fashion have traditionally centered on mass-manufactured American sportswear, notable designers, whitewashed histories of Western wear, and the “American Look.” This canon, though familiar, stands starkly at odds with the lived realities of the American experience. Interviews with wearers and makers, family photographs, and detailed object photography illuminate absences and omissions in the dominant narratives of American fashion. (Re)Dressing American Fashion: Wear as Witness thus sheds new light on how fashion and dress have been used to shape and challenge constructs of American identity at the intersections of race, ethnicity, body size, ability, and gender over more than two centuries.
Distributed for Bard Graduate Center
Exhibition Schedule:
Bard Graduate Center, New York
(February 21–July 6, 2025)
ISBN: 9780300279160
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
280 pages