1. Styling Hirohito: Modernity, Monarchy, and "Western Clothes" in Interwar Japan.
- Author
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Campbell, Gavin James
- Subjects
- *
CLOTHING & dress , *INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) , *MONARCHY , *MODERNITY , *PRINCES , *FASHION , *JAPANESE people ,WESTERN countries - Abstract
This paper examines the Japanese crown prince and emperor Hirohito during the 1920s to think more critically about how fashion historians can analyze "western" dress in non-western contexts. In particular, this essay looks at Hirohito's embrace of new forms of middle-class menswear—particularly sportswear and the lounge suit—to signal fundamental shifts in the relationship between monarch and subject. These innovations rested upon far more than simply imitating western centers of men's fashion. Instead, this paper argues that to understand the meaning of "western" clothing styles in non-western contexts, fashion studies needs a more sophisticated paradigm than the term "western clothes." While some garments carried strong resonances of their European antecedents, Japanese men like Hirohito adopted them primarily for what they could do in Japan, while also understanding their potential for integrating Japan into the broader world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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