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Die Geschichte des Einzelhandels und des Konsums

Diese Reihe befasst sich eingehend mit der reichen und vielfältigen Geschichte des Handels und Konsums in verschiedenen Epochen und Kulturen. Von antiken Marktplätzen bis zu modernen Einzelhandelsstrategien deckt jeder Band die faszinierende Entwicklung auf, wie Menschen Waren gekauft, verkauft und konsumiert haben. Mit Schwerpunkten auf Schlüsselaspekten wie Mode, Design und Lebensmitteln bietet die Sammlung tiefgreifende Einblicke in die sozialen und wirtschaftlichen Kräfte, die unsere Kaufgewohnheiten geprägt haben.

Clothing Culture, 1350-1650
Making, Selling and Wearing Boys' Clothes in Late-Victorian England
Turning Houses into Homes
Men and Menswear

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  • Men and Menswear

    Sartorial Consumption in Britain 1880-1939

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    Exploring the evolution of menswear retailing from 1880 to 1939, this book delves into the complexities of masculine identity and male consumption patterns. It examines how men engaged in activities often deemed 'unmanly,' such as selling and buying clothing, providing fresh insights into their lives and identities during this transformative era. Through this lens, the work highlights the interplay between fashion and masculinity, revealing broader cultural implications.

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  • Turning Houses into Homes

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  • The study explores how Britain's consumer culture and modern business practices were shaped by the ready-to-wear boys' clothing market. Through comprehensive visual and statistical analysis, it connects the design and retailing of boys’ apparel to broader social, cultural, and economic issues. This investigation highlights the significance of boys' clothing production and consumption in understanding the rise of consumer society, mass-market fashion, and evolving concepts of childhood and masculinity.

    Making, Selling and Wearing Boys' Clothes in Late-Victorian England
  • "Addressing the subject of clothing in relation to such fundamental issues as national identity, social distinction, gender, the body, religion and politics, Clothing Culture, 1350-1650 provides a springboard into one of the most fascinating yet least understood aspects of social and cultural history. Nowhere in medieval and early modern European society was its hierarchical and social divisions more obviously reflected than in the sphere of clothing. Indeed, one of the few constant themes of writers, chroniclers, diarists and commentators from Chaucer to Pepys was the subject of fashion and clothes. Whether it was lauding the magnificence of court, warning against the vanity of fashion, describing the latest modes, or decrying the habit of the lower orders to ape the dress of their social superiors, people throughout history have been fascinated by the symbolism, power and messages that clothes can project. Yet despite this contemporary interest, clothing as a subject of historical enquiry has been a largely neglected field of academic study. Whilst it has been discussed in relation to various disciplines, it has not in many cases found a place as a central topic of analysis in its own right. The essays presented in this volume form part of a growing recent trend to put fashion and clothing back into the centre ground of historical research. From Russia to Rome, Ireland to France, this volume contains a wealth of examples of the numerous ways clothing was shaped by, and helped to shape, medieval and early modern European society. Furthermore, it demonstrates how the study of clothing can illuminate other facets of life and why it deserves to be treated as a central, rather than peripheral, facet of European history"--Publisher's description

    Clothing Culture, 1350-1650