2017
DOI: 10.1177/1464700117734730
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Aesthetic objects on display: The objectification of fashion models as a situated practice

Abstract: This article unravels the process of objectification by empirically examining a social context where it occurs almost incessantly: fashion modeling. Drawing on an ethnography of fashion modeling in Amsterdam, Paris and Warsaw, I argue that objectification is neither ubiquitous nor one-dimensional: it takes place in specific social contexts and unfolds itself differently under different social conditions. Moreover, objectification is not unidirectional: it is done by and happens to both men and women. By taking… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The peripheral character of Dutch fashion was a salient theme: informants were oriented towards international standards and complained about the lack of glamour, status and quality of the dependent Dutch field. Study 2 investigated fashion modelling in France, the Netherlands and Poland [Holla 2016; 2018; 2020]. While the Paris field proved quite distinct, the Dutch and Polish findings showed striking similarities in field structure, working conditions, aesthetic standards, and fashion professionals’ self-experience.…”
Section: Method Data and Research Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The peripheral character of Dutch fashion was a salient theme: informants were oriented towards international standards and complained about the lack of glamour, status and quality of the dependent Dutch field. Study 2 investigated fashion modelling in France, the Netherlands and Poland [Holla 2016; 2018; 2020]. While the Paris field proved quite distinct, the Dutch and Polish findings showed striking similarities in field structure, working conditions, aesthetic standards, and fashion professionals’ self-experience.…”
Section: Method Data and Research Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The central ideas of aesthetic labouring connect to the related concepts of biological capital (Pickard, 2018), glamour labour (Wissinger, 2016), and beauty work (Clarke, 2010). Debates across these related conceptual areas, prompted increased focus on the wider context for aesthetic concerns beyond specific organisations and attention turned to aesthetics within contemporary neoliberal economies (Holla, 2018). This lead Elias et al (2017: 5) to observe that 'neoliberalism makes us all aesthetic entrepreneurs'.…”
Section: Aesthetic Authenticity In Contemporary Timesmentioning
confidence: 99%