Fashion and the process of change
Fashion, by definition, changes regularly. The changes may proceed more quickly than in most other fields of human activities (language, thought, etc). For some, modern fast-paced changes in fashion embody many of the negative aspects of capitalism: it results in waste and encourages people qua regulars to buy things unnecessarily. Others, particularly young people, enjoy the diversity that varying fashion can it seems that provide, seeing the constant change as a way to satisfy their desire to experience "new" and "interesting" things. Note too that fashion can change to enforce uniformity, as in the case where so-called Mao suits became the national uniform of mainland China.At the same time there remains an equal or larger range designated (at least currently) 'out of fashion'. (These or similar fashions may cyclically come back 'into fashion' in due course, and remain 'in fashion' again for a while.).Practically every aspect of appearance has been changed at some time, for example skirt lengths ranging from ankle to mini to so short that it just covers anything, etc. In the past, new discoveries and lesser-known parts of the world could provide an impetus to change fashions based on the exotic: Europe in the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries, for example, might favor things Turkish at one time, things Chinese at another, and things Japanese at a third. The current version of exotic clothing includes club wear. Globalization has reduced the options of exotic novelty in more recent times, and has seen the introduction of non-Western wear into the Western world. Fashion houses and their connected fashion designers, as well as high-status consumers (including celebrities), appear to have some role in determining the rates and directions of fashion change.
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