纽约服装技术学院博物馆:炫耀性消费

Dresses up: the history of fashion accessories

服饰:时尚配饰的历史

纽约服装技术学院博物馆:炫耀性消费

提到这个话题,不禁想到之前看过的电影《一个购物狂的自白》。分享其中一首插曲《Calling You》。

In the Victorian era, a wealthy woman wouldn’t dream of [0]leaving the house without covering herself from fingertip to elbow with a pair of pale gloves[1].

在维多利亚时代,贵妇不戴白色过肘长手套是绝不会出门的。

纽约服装技术学院博物馆:炫耀性消费

Leisure was a badge[2] of honour, and gloves confirmed that their wearer need not work.

休闲是一枚荣誉勋章,戴手套的人无需工作。

These days, work is a source of status.

如今,地位源于工作。

The most ubiquitous[3] accessories (beyond face-masks) are bluetooth earbuds to block out background noise while toiling, and covers that protect smartphones.

最普遍的配件(比口罩还普遍)是在工作中用于隔绝环境噪音的蓝牙耳机和保护手机的手机壳。

纽约服装技术学院博物馆:炫耀性消费

纽约服装技术学院博物馆:炫耀性消费

On Wednesday the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology New York[4] will open a new exhibition charting the history of women’s accessories over the past two centuries.

周三,纽约服装技术学院博物馆将开放新展馆,描绘过去两个世纪以来女性配饰的历史。

The objects on display are concerned with what Thorstein Veblen, a Norwegian-American economist, called “conspicuous consumption[5]”: the way individuals buy products that publicise their position (desired or real) in society.

展物聚焦于挪威裔美国经济学家Thorstein Veblen所谓的“炫耀性消费”,即个人通过购买相应产品以凸显其(理想的或实际的)社会地位。

They also show how what is deemed worth showing off changes along with society itself.

这些展物也体现了那些被公认值得炫耀的东西是如何随社会变化的。

炫耀性商品又叫奢侈品,既然是用于凸显社会地位,那就意味着它会随社会变化而变化。

首发(公众号:肖坤稼)

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