Americana : The Journal of American Popular Culture, 1900 to Present; Hollywood, Apr 1, 2016
Elizabeth Wissinger is a Professor at the City University of New York Graduate School and Center,... more Elizabeth Wissinger is a Professor at the City University of New York Graduate School and Center, as well as BMCC, where she teaches Fashion Studies and Sociology. Her research focuses on technology, fashion, and embodiment. Professor Wissinger has lectured on topics related to gender and race, media, bodies, labor, and fashion in the US, Canada, Australia, and Europe. She is also the co-author of the edited volume, Fashioning Models: Image, Text, and Industry (Berg, 2012) with Joanne Entwistle. Her research has earned several grants and awards, including Mellon Fellowships in both the Humanities and Science Studies. Her current research takes up the issue of how wearable technology genders bodies.We discussed her new book This Year's Model: Fashion, Media, and the Making of Glamour (New York University Press, 2015).------------What drew you to the study of fashion?Fashion is a power structure that organizes so many aspects of life in need of analysis: patriarchy, feminist issues, embodiment, labor issues, globalization, and social justice. I had been exposed to the world in my early years in NYC, and during my graduate training I became fascinated by the notion that fashion studies was a field.As I note in the book, the proliferation of selfie-obsessed, #nofilter culture, the pressure for ordinary people to try to be fashionable has been spreading beyond young girls duckfacing in the bathroom. Fashion has become a lifestyle for so many, I wanted to know more about why.When people copy Kim K’s selfie for example, they are driving an image economy, but who profits? Facebook and Instagram. The fun of it all lures us into selling ourselves. Tweeting about or posting one’s latest physical accomplishments, posting a selfie of one’s newly enhanced butt, slimmed waist, or latest outfit pulls one’s bodily potential and connectivity into metering and regulation an availability that facilitates capital’s constant expansion. At the same time, the very act of posting, puts one’s glamour quotient on the line, rising and falling by the metrics of likes, hearts, influence scores, and views. Keeping the quotient high becomes a sort of compulsion, the glamour labor to stay visible and relevant - to matter.What inspired you to write this book?I was interested in issues surrounding women’s power and came to realize that having lived as part of the New York fashion scene as a young woman gave me a unique perspective on the most iconic figures of this world: fashion models. Whether you hate to love them, or love to hate them, fashion models are a key element of popular culture. Their work is embroiled in debates about controversial bodily ideals.They are at the center of struggles for social power and acceptance, and they figure prominently in conflicts between men and women. Needless to say, fashion modeling is a hot topic that pushes many buttons.For all its glamour, modeling’s dark underbelly has been well documented. For instance, you may have seen Girl Model - a documentary about scouting for teen girls in Siberia, and the deplorable conditions they sometimes find themselves in in Japan - or J’Amais Assez Maigre - French model Victoire Dauxerre’s account of her struggle to keep her health and sanity while working as a model. Debates center on whether images of skinny models cause eating disorders or damage young girls’ self esteem. This conflict has been ongoing since the 1970s, which is significant as I discuss in my book.What is "glamour labor"?Glamour labor is a phenomenon of the internet age. I hit on the idea of glamour labor when trying to explain modeling work. A key process in modeling is constructing one’s “look.” The model “look” comprises the model’s appearance in person, and all the images in which the model has appeared. The “look” marries the physical body and the virtual self into one and was helpful in understanding the idea of affective labor, which drew me to study models. …
How do gendered power structures colonize wearable tech and biodesign practice? This paper conten... more How do gendered power structures colonize wearable tech and biodesign practice? This paper contends that it is not just the practitioner’s gender, but the gender of the practice itself, that affects the sense of the body being designed for, as well as design goals. Drawing on participant observation and interview data from the wearable tech and biodesign communities, this analysis explores the concrete effects of symbolic gender dichotomies on wearable tech and biodesign practices and outcomes. Extending critical race and technology studies’ claim that design settings’ lack of diversity can lead to biased outcomes, it looks at the lack of diversity in design methods, especially regarding gendered design practices, such as sewing or knitting, in the realm of embodied technology. It examines gendered assumptions in both digital wearable tech, and biodesign, which incorporates living organisms into its function, such as weaving conductive protein nano-wires into mushroom grown textiles...
Americana : The Journal of American Popular Culture, 1900 to Present; Hollywood, Apr 1, 2016
Elizabeth Wissinger is a Professor at the City University of New York Graduate School and Center,... more Elizabeth Wissinger is a Professor at the City University of New York Graduate School and Center, as well as BMCC, where she teaches Fashion Studies and Sociology. Her research focuses on technology, fashion, and embodiment. Professor Wissinger has lectured on topics related to gender and race, media, bodies, labor, and fashion in the US, Canada, Australia, and Europe. She is also the co-author of the edited volume, Fashioning Models: Image, Text, and Industry (Berg, 2012) with Joanne Entwistle. Her research has earned several grants and awards, including Mellon Fellowships in both the Humanities and Science Studies. Her current research takes up the issue of how wearable technology genders bodies.We discussed her new book This Year's Model: Fashion, Media, and the Making of Glamour (New York University Press, 2015).------------What drew you to the study of fashion?Fashion is a power structure that organizes so many aspects of life in need of analysis: patriarchy, feminist issues, embodiment, labor issues, globalization, and social justice. I had been exposed to the world in my early years in NYC, and during my graduate training I became fascinated by the notion that fashion studies was a field.As I note in the book, the proliferation of selfie-obsessed, #nofilter culture, the pressure for ordinary people to try to be fashionable has been spreading beyond young girls duckfacing in the bathroom. Fashion has become a lifestyle for so many, I wanted to know more about why.When people copy Kim K’s selfie for example, they are driving an image economy, but who profits? Facebook and Instagram. The fun of it all lures us into selling ourselves. Tweeting about or posting one’s latest physical accomplishments, posting a selfie of one’s newly enhanced butt, slimmed waist, or latest outfit pulls one’s bodily potential and connectivity into metering and regulation an availability that facilitates capital’s constant expansion. At the same time, the very act of posting, puts one’s glamour quotient on the line, rising and falling by the metrics of likes, hearts, influence scores, and views. Keeping the quotient high becomes a sort of compulsion, the glamour labor to stay visible and relevant - to matter.What inspired you to write this book?I was interested in issues surrounding women’s power and came to realize that having lived as part of the New York fashion scene as a young woman gave me a unique perspective on the most iconic figures of this world: fashion models. Whether you hate to love them, or love to hate them, fashion models are a key element of popular culture. Their work is embroiled in debates about controversial bodily ideals.They are at the center of struggles for social power and acceptance, and they figure prominently in conflicts between men and women. Needless to say, fashion modeling is a hot topic that pushes many buttons.For all its glamour, modeling’s dark underbelly has been well documented. For instance, you may have seen Girl Model - a documentary about scouting for teen girls in Siberia, and the deplorable conditions they sometimes find themselves in in Japan - or J’Amais Assez Maigre - French model Victoire Dauxerre’s account of her struggle to keep her health and sanity while working as a model. Debates center on whether images of skinny models cause eating disorders or damage young girls’ self esteem. This conflict has been ongoing since the 1970s, which is significant as I discuss in my book.What is "glamour labor"?Glamour labor is a phenomenon of the internet age. I hit on the idea of glamour labor when trying to explain modeling work. A key process in modeling is constructing one’s “look.” The model “look” comprises the model’s appearance in person, and all the images in which the model has appeared. The “look” marries the physical body and the virtual self into one and was helpful in understanding the idea of affective labor, which drew me to study models. …
How do gendered power structures colonize wearable tech and biodesign practice? This paper conten... more How do gendered power structures colonize wearable tech and biodesign practice? This paper contends that it is not just the practitioner’s gender, but the gender of the practice itself, that affects the sense of the body being designed for, as well as design goals. Drawing on participant observation and interview data from the wearable tech and biodesign communities, this analysis explores the concrete effects of symbolic gender dichotomies on wearable tech and biodesign practices and outcomes. Extending critical race and technology studies’ claim that design settings’ lack of diversity can lead to biased outcomes, it looks at the lack of diversity in design methods, especially regarding gendered design practices, such as sewing or knitting, in the realm of embodied technology. It examines gendered assumptions in both digital wearable tech, and biodesign, which incorporates living organisms into its function, such as weaving conductive protein nano-wires into mushroom grown textiles...
This is the title of the book chapter. You can request a copy from me or better yet, buy the book... more This is the title of the book chapter. You can request a copy from me or better yet, buy the book! Wissinger, Elizabeth, “Click-Click-Gimme-Gimme: Pleasures and Perils of the “Opt In” World of Fashion Tech.” Embodied Computing: Wearables, Implantables, Embeddables, Ingestibles. Isabel Pedersen and Andrew Illiadis, eds. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2020
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Papers by Elizabeth Wissinger
Wissinger, Elizabeth, “Click-Click-Gimme-Gimme: Pleasures and Perils of the “Opt In” World of Fashion Tech.” Embodied Computing: Wearables, Implantables, Embeddables, Ingestibles. Isabel Pedersen and Andrew Illiadis, eds. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2020