Division of Applied Undergraduate Studies
Oppositional Dress: A Subtext of Fashion
Description: This course will explore how dress, both in terms of
personal self fashioning and looks connected to subcultural or
countercultural groups has served to communicate oppositional statements in
the twentieth century. Questions concerning the definitions of subculture
will be addressed, in addition to expanding on how particular looks have
informed the fashion industry and what this has meant to the history of
fashion studies. Drawing from examples in the Unites States and Britain
primarily we will focus on distinctive styles, and explore what these looks
signified at the time of their inception and how they have come to be read
as iconic today. A variety of sources including photography, film and
musical performances will be considered using an interdisciplinary approach
drawing from Subculture studies, Fashion Theory, Sociology, and Cultural
Studies. An examination of how specific elements of dress, such as zoot
suits, bell-bottoms, or safety pinned T-shirts inform the study of fashion
as material culture but also how they have been interpreted in scholarship
and the popular media