Browse by Subject
Explore our complete collection
Status
Format
Language
Publishing
Resources
News & Updates
About Vernon Press
Subjects
Series
Publication Status
Type
Loading...
Please wait while we load the content...
National Museums Scotland
Megan Strickfaden, Georgina Ripley, Michelle McVicker, Sandra Mathey García-Rada, Tolulope Omoyele, Echo Malleo, Milana Stewart, Angela Hermano Crenshaw, Wafa Ghnaim, Flannery Surette, Lauren Downing Peters, Emma McClendon, Wonne Scrayen, Shirley P. Foster, Marcy L. Koontz, Rebecca Helgeson, Camille Myers Breeze, Kenna Libes, and Laura Beltran-Rubio
'Fashion’s Missing Masses' fills a gap in literature on museums and fashion collections and focuses on the display of clothing and fashion that has historically been left out of the canon. The fifteen essays in this volume span topics on Indigenous and traditional dress; disabled and fat bodies; and queer and ethnic identities. Their authors study the ways that dress and textiles have been collected, displayed, and often ignored across a century and a half of museum exhibitions. Representation and inclusion in fashion museums is a new and rapidly evolving area of research in the reexamination of dress history. These chapters provide unique information and perspectives on curation, collections management, conservation, and research, which will be valuable to a wide group of audiences working, teaching, and learning in and about museums. This volume touches on practical concerns of exhibition, including mannequin availability and difficulties of mounting dress, as well as broader questions of scholarship and activism that will be key for educators and researchers who wish to stay abreast of developments in this field. Diversity in fashion is a hot topic, and understanding the line between tokenization and representation in spaces of institutional authority is crucial to learning how we can better serve our diverse populations in the teaching of history.