Image for The National Fabric

The National Fabric : Fashion, Britishness, Globalization

Part of the Dress, body, culture series
See all formats and editions

British fashion is characterized by oppositions: punk versus pageantry, anarchy versus monarchy, Cool Britannia versus Rule Britannia.

Why has British fashion come to be so contradictory?

How are these contradictions employed to 'sell British'?

What do they mean for consumers who 'buy British'? Through an examination of iconic fashion companies Paul Smith and Mulberry, The National Fabric provides telling insights into the culture of contemporary fashion and the dilemmas of 'going global'.

Goodrum argues that 'Britishness' is characterized less through a particular look than through its ambiguities.

She shows how the apparently straightforward and economically-driven process of globalizing British fashion is, in fact, far more culturally nuanced and locally embedded than has previously been suggested.

In examining the interplay between fashion and Britishness, Goodrum redresses a longstanding omission in fashion theory, which has been preoccupied with class, gender and race rather than with national identity.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£30.59 Save 10.00%
RRP £33.99
Product Details
Berg Publishers
1845201876 / 9781845201876
Paperback / softback
01/09/2005
United Kingdom
English
288 p. : ill.
25 cm
academic/professional/technical Learn More