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Fashion 1980 - Now - COFA0208
 COFA0208

   
   
   
 
Campus: College of Fine Arts Campus
 
 
Career: Undergraduate
 
 
Units of Credit: 6
 
 
EFTSL: 0.12500 (more info)
 
 
Indicative Contact Hours per Week: 3
 
 
Excluded: GEND0208, SAHT2227
 
 
Fee Band: 1 (more info)
 
 
Further Information: See Class Timetable
 
  

Description

Online Elective Course

Why do high-heeled shoes feature in the television series Sex and the City? How are fashion, gender and sexuality linked? Why can women now wear a cheongsam dress and trainers? Fashion history and theory is one of the most rapidly developing areas of humanities research, drawing upon new theories of the body, social space, surfaces, ephemerality and popular culture.

This course examines fashion as a vehicle of self-fashioning since the 1980s. It will present a variety of theoretical methods to interpret the fashion choices of post-modern society.

You will study themes including fashion and identity politics; the ‘post-subculturalist'; fashion design and the street; gender and consumerism; cross-cultural dressing. You will examine topics including music and dress; dress and sexuality; vintage, retro and second-hand clothing; ‘anti-fashion’; ‘costume play’ and Japanese ‘cuteness’ (kawaii); and the spectacle of the contemporary fashion parade.

The course will include topics and collaborative assessment in which ‘net society’ plays a role. Your tasks may range from online diaries to role-plays as a fashion victim having to defend your stance.

NOTE: This course is conducted via the Omnium system (omnium.edu.au). Students will receive log in instructions via their UNSW email account prior to the commencement of the course.

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© The University of New South Wales (CRICOS Provider No.: 00098G), 2004-2011. The information contained in this Handbook is indicative only. While every effort is made to keep this information up-to-date, the University reserves the right to discontinue or vary arrangements, programs and courses at any time without notice and at its discretion. While the University will try to avoid or minimise any inconvenience, changes may also be made to programs, courses and staff after enrolment. The University may also set limits on the number of students in a course.