The Archaeology of Fashion

The Archaeology of Fashion
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The Archaeology of Fashion
Memories of Worn History, Secondhand Objects, and Material (Auto)Biographies of First-Generation Americans
Author(s): Nicole K. Rivas

Explore the relationship between garments and their wearers where secondhand objects are excavated from personal archives, inherited as hand-me-downs, preserved as family heirlooms, and recontextualized through stylization.

FORTHCOMING
Publication Date
ISBN: 9781916985803
Pages: 150

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ISBN: 9781916985780 Price: USD 34.95

Using inherited garments, how is the choice of clothing significant in the context of the wearer’s surroundings and culture? How does it communicate one’s self-identity as a first-generation American?

When we dress ourselves, we are visually narrating to the world how we wish to be seen. Therefore, styling is a form of storytelling. It provides a framework to express cultural connections and ethnic pride across place and time; the outfit tells a story. Author Nicole K. Rivas combines visual and material culture to investigate sartorial representations of self-identity from the perspective of first-generation Americans, using garments of the past through contemporary archaeological approaches.

Touching on themes of memory, upbringing, culture, and autonomy, this book is ideal for students of Fashion and Personal Style, Textiles, Art, Material Culture, Cultural Anthropology, Gender Studies, and History.

About The Book

Using inherited garments, how is the choice of clothing significant in the context of the wearer’s surroundings and culture? How does it communicate one’s self-identity as a first-generation American?

When we dress ourselves, we are visually narrating to the world how we wish to be seen. Therefore, styling is a form of storytelling. It provides a framework to express cultural connections and ethnic pride across place and time; the outfit tells a story. Author Nicole K. Rivas combines visual and material culture to investigate sartorial representations of self-identity from the perspective of first-generation Americans, using garments of the past through contemporary archaeological approaches.

Touching on themes of memory, upbringing, culture, and autonomy, this book is ideal for students of Fashion and Personal Style, Textiles, Art, Material Culture, Cultural Anthropology, Gender Studies, and History.

About The Author

Nicole K. Rivas is an Assistant Professor of Fashion Studies in the Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies program at St John’s University.

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