Fashion Models and Postmodern Consumer Society-By Julia Chan, 1996 From: http://www.film.queensu.ca/Femina/model.html (remote)
Models act as these masks. By putting their clothes on a beautiful woman and photographing her in an interesting place, advertisers attempt to create a link between the product (clothing) and the lifestyle, as if by donning these clothes we will be transported into an exciting life. For example, this fashion spread (see Fig. 1) was photographed at the models' own downtown loft apartment. This fashion story lightly appropriates the style of lish clothes on young, beautiful, energetic women obviously having the time of their lives; we are to think, "To get the part, I must dress the part..." Intimately connected to our model fetish is Berger's concepts of envy and glamour. While advertisers use models as an "example" for the reader, just showing the reader possibilities is not enough: it is necessary to create envy of the model in the reader to ensure product consumption. Berger explains that advertising images use models to display the reader's "self which [s]he might be (132)", a self which is enviable because it is a glamourous self:
Therefore, enviable glamour is constructed out of beauty and distance. Models become enviable because their beauty seems effortless, they seem unconscious of it. Their faces are beautiful but blank. We are to envy their lack of effort, and to try to emulate it by buying the product. However, as discussed above, their looks are anything but effortless. Harris points out that sometimes the model displays an "inexplicable unfriendliness (129)", which he explains as being "treated to the ultimate form of glamour, the glamour of rejection, of models so confident of their own mystique that they seem to despise what the reader herself values highly, the so-called `male gaze' (132)." These models, aware of their beauty, have looks of arrogance, of disdain for the reader. We are to envy their perceived right to arrogance; we are to believe that if we look like that, we can also have the right to arrogance and be envied. Therefore, the model's role is to infuse the product with "life" and to make themselves enviable, inciting the reader to consumption. Due to this state of envied glamour, schizophrenic representation, and lack of subjectivity in the postmodern sense, a model becomes the ultimate object. Because she is without individuality, because she is an envied and glamourous product of others' labour, and because her presentation is schizophrenic, a model becomes a spectacle, she becomes merely something to look at. She exists only on the visual plane. Jameson writes, "[A] signifier that has lost its signified has thereby been transformed into an image (96)." What happens when a woman becomes an image? Berger argues:
The supermodel Naomi Campbell explains:
Therefore, models are denied their voices and are represented only visually; they must depend on the team who created their look to supply them with some sort of "statement". Since models are presented as the feminine ideal, women are encouraged to do the same: to express themselves most strongly at the visual level, leave the voice behind, turn herself into a spectacle, an object. One needs only to frequent any nightclub in order to witness this process. In any case, the model's primary function is to create the desire to consume. To successfully do that, the model must conform to certain criteria set by the fashion industry--she must be beautiful, perpetually young, impossibly thin, and abnormally tall. Why such fantastic standards? Naomi Wolf writes:
Likewise, Gail Faurschou argues, "Fashion is the logic of planned obsolescence--not just the necessity for market survival, but the cycle of desire itself (80)..." Therefore, the models' extraordinary and short-lived qualities work not only to create a perpetual desire for products, but also to ensure their own disposability and continue indefinitely the cycle of the "new". As products of a postmodern consumerist society, the role of the model reflects its qualities. As defined by Jameson, the model personifies the death of the subject and her representation in time and space likens to schizophrenic experience. Because of this lack of "reality", models have become the ultimate fetish object, sentenced to expression only through the visual. Their own exceptional qualities, however, are short-lived and ensures their obsolescence, making room for new models and perpetuating the cycle of desire. Presented as role models, women are encouraged to emulate them by consuming the products the models are used to sell, in a neverending chase for perfection that will never be reached, that only drives the consumerist cycle. -By Julia Chan, 1996 (Julia welcomes any discussion on this essay. Please head on over to our Bulletin Board). (remote) Works Cited (remote) Works Cited Berger, John. Ways of Seeing. New York: The Viking Press, Inc., 1973. Craik, Jennifer. The Face of Fashion. New York: Routledge, 1994. Faurschou, Gail. "Fashion and the Cultural Logic of Postmodernity" Advertising and Consumer Culture. Ed. Jody Baker. Canadian Scholars' Press, Inc., 1996, pp. 77-85. Harris, Daniel. "Some Reflections on the Facial Expression of Fashion Models: 100 Years of Vogue" in Salmagundi. Spring/Summer 1993, no. 98-99, pp. 12-140. Jameson, Fredric. "Postmodernism and Consumer Society" in Advertising and Consumer Culture. Ed. Jody Baker. Canadian Scholars' Press Inc., 1996, pp. 91-98. Leiss, William, Stephen Kline, and Sut Jhally. Social Communication in Advertising. 2nd ed. Scarborough: Nelson Canada, 1990. Wolf, Naomi. The Beauty Myth. Toronto: Vintage Books, 1991. Last updated 11 June 1997 by Julia Chan, Patricia Connolly, & Chris Kennedy Contact: Julia Chan at 4jshc@qlink.queensu.ca |