Blue Jeans: The Art of the Ordinary"Miller and Woodward draw our attention to an ubiquitous aspect of modern living, one that rarely rises to the level of consciousness. Blue Jeans undeniably provokes. It succeeds at bringing the ordinary into plain view. After reading the book, I noticed how much more alert I was to the presence of jeans--who was wearing them and in what situations." -Robert J. Foster, author of Coca-Globalization: Following Soft Drinks from New York to New Guinea. "In their new book Blue Jeans: The Art of Ordinary, Woodward and Miller explore how jeans identify their wearer more than any other single garment. Whether on the runway, in prison, downtown or homeless, they say so much more about you than what you’re wearing-- whether you like it or not." -Simon Collins, Dean of the School of Fashion at Parsons The New School for Design “The miracle of Daniel Miller and Sophie Woodward’s treatise is just how wide its insight stretches. Through the lens of something as ordinary as blue jeans, we are offered a view of culture, immigration, economics, women’s issues, and social and familial structures. Most of all, we are offered a unique view of ourselves.” -Rachel Louise Snyder, author of Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade |
Contents
Life | 16 |
Relationships | 30 |
Fashion | 46 |
Comfortable | 65 |
Ordinary | 84 |
The Struggle for Ordinary | 102 |
From Normative to Ordinary | 121 |
The Ordinary and the Routine | 139 |
157 | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieved anthropology argue argument associated baggy become blue jeans body brands casual chavs claims clothing color concept concern conformity context contrast cultural relativism Darren designer jeans developed discussion doesn’t dress ethnography everyday evidence example explicit fashion feel comfortable focus garment gender Global Denim Project Goldilocks phenomenon Hema idea ideal identity immigrants indigo individual interviewed issues jeans wearing Jeremy Clarkson kind less Levi’s lives London look Marks & Spencer material culture studies means migrants Miller moral mother normative occasions one’s ordinary pair of jeans parents participants particular people’s person post-semiotic practice Primark regard relationship routine says seems seen semiotic sense significant simply skinny jeans social science society someone specific started style of jeans talk teenagers theory thing tion trousers Ugg boots United Kingdom wardrobe wear blue jeans wear jeans wider woman women Woodward wore jeans worn