Installieren Sie die genialokal App auf Ihrem Startbildschirm für einen schnellen Zugriff und eine komfortable Nutzung.
Tippen Sie einfach auf Teilen:
Und dann auf "Zum Home-Bildschirm [+]".
Bei genialokal.de kaufen Sie online bei Ihrer lokalen, inhabergeführten Buchhandlung!
Over the past three centuries, London has established itself as one of the world's most inventive fashion capitals. Drawing on a range of sources, including paintings, street photography, maps, tourist guides, literature, and stage and press representations, Fashioning London paints a vivid and definitive portrait of London's iconoclastic style.
Explore how particular styles of dress became emblematic of this leading international city, ultimately challenging the fashion dominance of Paris, Milan, and New York. Christopher Breward constructs an original history of clothing in London, through its manufacture, promotion, and cultural significance, while examining how issues of space, architecture and performance impinge on notions of fashionability.
You will come away from this text understanding that although city life and fashion have always been intertwined, nowhere has this relationship been more excitingly expressed than on the streets of London.
Christopher Breward is the Director of National Museums Scotland and has worked at London College of Fashion, the Royal College of Art, the Victoria & Albert Museum London and the University of Edinburgh. A widely published author on the history and culture of fashion and design, he is also the co-editor of The Englishness of English Dress (Bloomsbury, 2002), Fashion and Modernity (Bloomsbury 2005), Fashion's World Cities (Bloomsbury, 2006) and Styling Shanghai (Bloomsbury 2020).
Preface to the re-issue
1. The Dandy: London's new West End 1790-1830
2. The Immigrant: East End, West End 1840-1914
3. The Actress: Covent Garden and The Strand 1880-1914
4. The Hostess and the Housewife: From Mayfair to Edgware 1918-1939
5. The Teddy Boy: Lambeth, Soho and Belgravia 1945-1960
6. The Dolly Bird: Chelsea and Kensington 1960-1970
7. The Student: Camden Market 1970-2000
Bibliography
Afterword