REVIEW
OF BODYSTYLES BY TED POLHEMUS
This is the most comprehensive of my works - combining ideas on the anthropology
of the body which I first explored in my graduate thesis and expanding
and updating ideas about fashion and style which first appeared in Fashion
& Anti-fashion. As if that weren’t enough, I also threw in modesty,
eroticism and gender issues. Indeed, re-reading Bodystyles after
12 years, I feel it should have been five books instead of one. There
is simply too much crammed in. The other problem is that the writing style
and many of the ideas are too complex for a popularly-oriented picture
book. Despite this, however, this remains my only published work in which
themes which I find personally highly exciting (in particular, the interplay
of the physical and social levels of meaning, the social constructedness
of the body) are explored in any depth. Given that most academic anthropologists
have shown little interest in my work and given, on the other hand, that
far too few professionals within the fashion world seem interested in
the looking at this industry from an intellectual perspective, there has
not, since Bodystyles, been a suitable occasion for me to further
develop these ideas.
When Bodystyles was reviewed in i-D magazine the reviewer concluded
‘Nice legs [referring to a particularly striking photograph] shame about
the text'. Perhaps he was right (for if nothing else, the style of this
writing is inappropriate in this kind of book) but I can’t help thinking
that this remark simply shows what is wrong with the way fashion/style
is written about and thought about (particularly in the English speaking
world).
Bodystyles was published in 1988 and has been out of print for
apx 10 years. Sometimes copies are available from Amazon.com.
- Ted Polhemus.
|