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FFS 402
Fashion and Modernity
This course develops and expands content originally contained in FSN 509 Topics in Fashion History and Theory. This foundation course in the history of modern fashion covers the period from the mid-Eighteenth Century to the present day. Through the use of primary and secondary literature, visual representations and in some cases, surviving objects, this lecture course will provide an in-depth knowledge of the period and familiarize the student with central debates, issues, resources and working methods in fashion studies. Selected themes from the period will cover both production and consumption and will include the origins of mass-production and the so-called democratization of fashion; its relation to the modern city and modern notions of identity; fashion dissemination such as developments in retailing and shopping and the emergence of mass circulation fashion magazines; the rise of the textile and fashion designer and the fashion photographer and the ethics of fashion. Throughout the course, the central importance of gender, class, modernity and tradition will be explored. Lecture format.
Weekly Contact: Lecture: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Course Count: 1.00
Billing Units: 1

Prerequisites
None
Co-Requisites
None
Antirequisites
None
Custom Requisites
None
Mentioned in the Following Calendar Pages
*List may not include courses that are on a common table shared between programs.
- Creative Industries Professional Table II
- FFS 710 - Post-Colonial Perspectives
- FSN 711 - Curation and Exhibition
- Fashion Communication/Design
- Fashion Core Elective Table II and III
- Fashion Professionally-Related Table II
- Minor in Fashion Studies