![]() ![]() Research was conducted in a number of different libraries and archives. This project was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant by publication, travel, and conference grants from The University of Melbourne, the Faculty of Arts, and the Department of History and by a three month fellowship at the Center for Chinese Studies, National Central Library, Taipei. The author and publishers wish to thank The University of Melbourne, and the Faculty of Arts and School of Historical Studies in The University of Melbourne, for their contributions to the cost of producing this book. List of Chinese Characters Technical Notes Bibliography Index Conclusion: Fashion, History, Time China and the world: a vestimentary history Fashion and time Breaking with the Past Reform-era fashions What women should wear Selling clothes # designingfashion International relations and some vestimentary events Cultural flows, globalisation, and regional belongingġ1. Dressed to Kill in the Cultural Revolution Dressing in the spirit ofMao Zedong Thought The Cultural Revolution and military fashions Up to the mountains, down to the villages The seventies The Jiang Qing dressġ0. ![]() The New Look in the New China Fashioning Chinese socialism National culture in Yu Feng'sfashion theory Chinesefashions and world time The scope and limitations of the dress reform campaignĩ. Her Brother's Clothes Suits and gowns in the Republican era Gender, dress and nation The drift towards trousersĨ. Qipao China The rise of the qipao Beijingfashions circa 1925 Thefashionable qipao Beijing style, Shanghai style The problem of the bob Bound breasts and brassieres Modern girls and vestimentary sanctionsħ. The Fashion Industry in Shanghai A textile industry for Shanghai Tailoring and technology Sewing machines Knitting and knitting machines Advertising Pictorials and fashion designers The shopping MeccaĦ. Soldiers and Citizens New uniforms for a new army The militarisation of civilian dress Campaigning against the queue Thefashionable effects of natural feet and education The permeability ofgender boundaries Towards "xinhai"fashion Citizens of the Republicĥ. Fashions in Late Imperial China Signs and symptoms of Ming fashions Changing styles of women's dress Qingfashions: the example ofYangzhou Fashion, the times, and the world Fashions in the 1840s Fashion, fiction and modernityĤ. Ways of Seeing Early modern commentaries Qing Costume Footbinding and the status of Chinese civilisation Cultural relativism and vestimentary practices Gender differentiation in cultural relativism Conclusionģ. Introduction: Fashion, History, Nation Fashion, history and early modernity Fashion and national politicsĢ. Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.ĬONTENTS Acknowledgements List of Illustrationsġ. ![]() Printed in India c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 References to Internet Web sites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing. This book is printed on paper with recycled content. GT1555.F56 2007 391.00951-dc22 2007007239 ooĬolumbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. Changing clothes in China : fashion, modernity, nation / by Antonia Finnane. Changing Clothes in China Fashion, History, NationĬolumbia University Press Publishers Since 1893 New York, Chichester, West Sussex © Antonia Finnane, 2008 All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Finnane, Antonia. ![]()
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