Description
Through the cross-analysis of images, interviews and garments, this volume charts the dawn of the French ready-made clothing industry between 1945 and 1968, linking it to national reconstruction and modernisation, gender identities and ideas of modernity.
About the Author
Alexis Romano is a scholar of dress, design history and visual culture. She teaches at Parsons School of Design and is co-founder of the Fashion Research Network. She holds a PhD from the Courtauld Institute of Art and was the 2020-21 Curatorial Fellow at The Met's Costume Institute.
Reviews
This carefully researched and illustrated book offers a vibrant cultural history of French ready-to-wear, and of the ways its organization, promotion and representation are intimately connected to conceptions of identity, femininity and modernity. * Agnes Rocamora, London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London, UK *
This important book responds with both clarity and finesse to a lack of in-depth studies of a key period in the history of fashion: the post-war era, when everything had to be reinvented; and during which the rise of Pret a Porter and its creative proliferation in the 1960s mirrored the upheavals taking place within society. * Geraldine-Julie Sommier, Chloe Archive director, Paris, France *
Pret-a-Porter, Paris and Women offers a compelling narrative of national reconstruction and gender identity in the ready-to-wear clothing industry of post-World War II France. Alexis Romano skillfully unpacks the relationship between fashion photography, women's magazines and the city of Paris, and by interpreting fashion's representations through the lens of political theory the author also makes an important contribution to methodology. * Francesca Berry, University of Birmingham, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781350215931
Author Alexis Romano
Format Paperback
Page Count 264
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC