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Comfort in clothing: fashion actors and victims.

Cross, Karen

Authors



Contributors

Melanie Miller
Editor

Abstract

Fashion psychology is an emerging discipline, recognising the potential of clothing to enhance well-being in an era when mental health issues are increasing in the Western world. Well-being is important to the individual and on a wider societal level, with the Office for National Statistics monitoring the well-being of UK inhabitants and the World Health Organisation stating that depression will be the most common health issue in the world by 2030. As comfort is a key aspect of well-being, this study explores meanings associated with comfort and discomfort in everyday, non-elite clothing. Comfort in clothing can by physical, physiological and psychological, and the psychological comfort gained from clothing is identified in literature as under-researched. Psychological theory was explored, revealing individuals perform multiple identities, dependent on the reaction of others and filtered by previous, lived experience. Fashion was found to be a recognized method of communicating identity in the social space and research suggests the physical response to psychological constructs or meanings associated with certain garments can be used to change or enhance mood. As psychological comfort can only be measured subjectively, this study employed an interpretive paradigm and qualitative methodology. In keeping with fashion’s location within visual culture, participant-produced visuals, described as a form of photo elicitation were collected, accompanied by short narratives. Fashion Management students, as a key informant sample, were briefed to create photographic fashion images styled on a ‘Comfort in Clothing’ or ‘Discomfort: Fashion Victim’ theme, accompanied by 100-word narratives, providing rich data. The study was longitudinal, over a three-year period, to negate the influence of short-term fashion trends and groupthink. Multimodal textual analysis was used to explore comfort and discomfort associated with clothing and fashion in the participant-styled images and narratives. Four identities emerged; the private self, the unrestricted self, the body-conscious self and the confident self.

Citation

CROSS, K. 2019. Comfort in clothing: fashion actors and victims. In Miller, M. (ed.). Fashion: ID; proceedings of 21st International Foundation of Fashion Technology Institute (IFFTI) 2019 conference: fashion ID (IFFTI 2019), 8-12 April 2019, Manchester, UK. Manchester: Manchester Metropolitan University [online], pages 284-297. Available from: http://fashioninstitute.mmu.ac.uk/ifftipapers/paper-168/

Conference Name 21st International Foundation of Fashion Technology Institute (IFFTI) 2019 conference (IFFTI 2019): fashion ID
Conference Location Manchester, UK
Start Date Apr 8, 2019
End Date Apr 12, 2019
Acceptance Date Apr 8, 2019
Online Publication Date Dec 31, 2019
Publication Date Dec 31, 2019
Deposit Date Jul 3, 2020
Publicly Available Date Jul 3, 2020
Publisher Manchester Metropolitan University
Pages 284-297
Book Title Fashion: ID
ISBN 9781910029442
Keywords Comfort; Clothing; Dress; Identity; Well-being
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/940581
Publisher URL http://fashioninstitute.mmu.ac.uk/iffti2019/papers/

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