* Apologies for cross-posting *

Call for Papers:

RGS-IBG August 29 – September 1, 2017

Trending Now: The changing geographies of fashion in the digital age

Organizers:

Taylor Brydges – Uppsala University
Brian J. Hracs – University of Southampton
Mariangela Lavanga – Erasmus University Rotterdam

In the report The State of Fashion 2017, written by Business of Fashion and 
McKinsey Institute, industry executives used three words to describe the 
current state of the fashion industry: uncertain, changing, and challenging. 
Indeed, the fashion industry is undergoing dramatic transformations, from 
digitalization and the rise of ‘see now, buy now’ fashions to brands redefining 
the function and timing of fashion weeks. In recent years, economic, social, 
and cultural geographers have recognized and harnessed fashion’s potential to 
serve as a valuable lens through which to explore radical and ongoing changes 
to the production, curation and consumption of goods, services, and experiences 
(Crewe 2013, 2017; Hracs et al., 2013; Brydges et al., 2014; D’Ovidio, 2015; 
Lavanga, forthcoming, McRobbie 2016; McRobbie et al., 2016).

This session aims to build on and extent this work by bringing together 
researchers probing the structures, labour dynamics, spaces, value propositions 
and practices of the contemporary fashion industry. For example, are we still 
in an era defined by the ‘big four’ of New York, London, Milan and Paris, or 
will the geography of fashion shift to emerging fashion capitals, like 
Stockholm and Berlin? By extension, as the fashion industry continues to 
consolidate into a handful of global firms, what are the opportunities for 
independent and/or slow fashion brands to ‘stand out in the crowd’ and create 
alternative and/or sustainable business models? More broadly, what is the 
impact of digitalization on the way fashion is designed, produced, promoted, 
curated and consumed?

This session seeks to explore these questions and related themes in greater 
details and welcomes papers from diverse conceptual, empirical and geographical 
perspectives.

Papers may wish to address one or more of the following questions:

  *   Has digitalization led to increased – or decreased – democratization in 
the fashion industry? What are the implications for employment opportunities 
and career trajectories of fashion designers, bloggers, and others working in 
the industry?
  *   How do specific physical and virtual spaces intersect in the world of 
fashion and what outcomes do they produce? For example, in what ways are 
permanent and temporary spaces (e.g. pop-up stores, fashion festivals, weeks 
and trade fairs), as well as online platforms such as Instagram, changing the 
geographies of retailing and consumption?
  *   Is the geography of global fashion capitals expanding or consolidating?
  *   To what extent has technology created opportunities for local markets to 
emerge, or have new technologies only reinforced the dominance of global firms 
and centers?
  *   What are the dynamics and geographies underpinning the rise of new 
movements in fashion, like slow fashion? Does increased transparency lead to 
increased sustainability?
  *   To what extent can cities cultivate and support the fashion industry more 
broadly, and independent fashion designers more specifically? What is the role 
and impact of policy at the national, regional and local scale?

If you are interested in presenting a paper in this session, please send your 
abstract (of 250 words) to Taylor Brydges 
(taylor.bryd...@kultgeog.uu.se<mailto:taylor.bryd...@kultgeog.uu.se>) by 
Friday, February 10, 2017.


References

Brydges, T., M. Lavanga and L. von Gunten (2014) Entrepreneurship in the 
fashion industry: a case study of slow fashion businesses. IN: A. Schramme, G. 
Hagoort and R. Kooyman (eds.) Beyond Frames. Dynamics between the creative 
industries, knowledge institutions and
the urban context. Delft: Eburon Academic Press/University of Chicago Press. 
(pp. 93-79).

Crewe, L. (2013) Tailoring and Tweed: Mapping the spaces of slow fashion. In 
Fashion Cultures: Theories, Explorations and Analysis. London: Routledge.

Crewe, L. (2017) The Geographies of Fashion: Consumption, Space and Value. 
Bloomsbury.

D’Ovidio, M. (2015) The field of fashion production in Milan: A theoretical 
discussion and an empirical investigation. City, Culture and Society, 6 (2): 
1-8.

Hracs B J, Jakob D and Hauge A (2013) Standing out in the Crowd: The rise of 
exclusivity-based strategies to compete in the contemporary marketplace for 
music and fashion. Environment and Planning A 45(5): 1144-1161.  
<http://doi.org/10.1068/a45>

Lavanga, M. (forthcoming) The role of Pitti Uomo trade fair in the menswear 
fashion industry In: Reggie Blaszczyk and Ben Wubs (eds.) The Fashion 
Forecasters: A Hidden History of Color and Trend Prediction. London: Bloomsbury 
Academic.

McRobbie, A. (2016) Towards a Sociology of Fashion Micro-Enterprises: Methods 
for Creative Economy Research. Sociology 50(5) 934-948.

McRobbie, A., Strutt, D., Bandinelli, C., and Springer, B. (2016) Fashion 
micro-enterprises in London, Berlin and Milan. CREATe Report Phase 1. 
(Available at: 
http://www.create.ac.uk/publications/fashion-micro-enterprises-in-london-berlin-milan/)


Dr. Brian J. Hracs
Lecturer in Human Geography
Geography and Environment
University of Southampton
Web: http://www.southampton.ac.uk/geography/about/staff/bjh1y13.page?
Web: https://brian-hracs.squarespace.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/brian_hracs

New Book: The Production and Consumption of Music in the Digital 
Age<https://www.routledge.com/The-Production-and-Consumption-of-Music-in-the-Digital-Age/Hracs-Seman-Virani/p/book/9781138851658>

AHRC Funded Project: Understanding and Supporting Creative Economies in 
Africa<http://www.creative-economy-africa.org.uk>


[cid:7942B9B3-DB08-46BF-A04C-077D0EE31F4A@soton.ac.uk]

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