Changing Clothes in China: Fashion, History, NationBased largely on nineteenth and twentieth-century representations of Chinese dress as traditional and unchanging, historians have long regarded fashion as something peculiarly Western. But in this surprising, sumptuously illustrated book, Antonia Finnane proves that vibrant fashions were a vital part of Chinese life in the late imperial era, when well-to-do men and women showed a keen awareness of what was up-to-date. |
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Spis treści
Introduction Fashion History Nation | 1 |
Fashion history and early modernity | 6 |
Fashion and national politics | 15 |
Ways of Seeing | 19 |
Early modern commentaries | 20 |
Qing Costume | 25 |
Footbinding and the status of Chinese civilisation | 29 |
Cultural relativism and vestimentary practices | 31 |
Beijing fashions circa 1925 | 145 |
The fashionable qipao | 149 |
Beijing style Shanghai style | 152 |
The problem of the bob | 157 |
Bound breasts and brassieres | 161 |
Modern girls and vestimentary sanctions | 167 |
Her Brothers Clothes | 177 |
Suits and gowns in the Republican era | 181 |
Gender differentiation in cultural relativism | 35 |
Conclusion | 40 |
Fashions in Late Imperial China | 43 |
Signs and symptoms of Ming fashions | 44 |
Changing styles of womens dress | 48 |
the example of Yangzhou | 52 |
Fashion the times and the world | 56 |
Fashions in the 1840s | 62 |
Fashion fiction and modernity | 64 |
Soldiers and Citizens | 69 |
New uniforms for a new army | 70 |
The militarisation of civilian dress | 75 |
Campaigning against the queue | 77 |
The fashionable effects of natural feet and education | 82 |
The permeability of gender boundaries | 87 |
Towards xinhai fashion | 92 |
Citizens of the Republic | 95 |
The Fashion Industry in Shanghai | 101 |
A textile industry for Shanghai | 106 |
Tailoring and technology | 110 |
Sewing machines | 116 |
Knitting and knitting machines | 120 |
Advertising | 123 |
Pictorials and fashion designers | 127 |
The shopping Mecca | 134 |
Qipao China | 139 |
The rise of the qipao | 141 |
Gender dress and nation | 188 |
The drift towards trousers | 198 |
The New Look in the New China | 201 |
Fashioning Chinese socialism | 206 |
National culture in Yu Fengs fashion theory | 211 |
Chinese fashions and world time | 215 |
The scope and limitations of the dress reform campaign | 219 |
Dressed to Kill in the Cultural Revolution | 227 |
Dressing in the spirit of Mao Zedong Thought | 229 |
The Cultural Revolution and military fashions | 231 |
Up to the mountains down to the villages | 240 |
The seventies | 244 |
The Jiang Qing dress | 247 |
Breaking with the Past | 257 |
What women should wear | 267 |
Selling clothes designing fashion | 277 |
International relations and vestimentary events | 283 |
Cultural flows globalisation and regional belonging | 286 |
Conclusion Fashion History Time | 291 |
a vestimentary history | 294 |
Fashion and time | 301 |
List of Chinese Characters | 303 |
Technical Notes | 311 |
Bibliography | 313 |
343 | |