COSTUME COMMUNICATION IN URBANS TRIBES: PUNKS, GRUNGES AND RAVERS
Keywords:
Tribos Urbanas, Identificação, ModaAbstract
This work deals with young people who took part in punk, grunge and rave urban tribes during the 1980s, 1990s and contemporary. Based on the Michel Maffesoli and Gilles Lipovetsky sociology of the French, the clothing language of these groups is discussed in order to understand their procedures for identification by means of fashion. The inspiration for this study came from the movie “Wild at Heart” David Lynch (1990), where the character Sailor Ripley (Nicolas Cage) emphasizes his individuality and belief in personal freedom, using a leather jacket snake. In the film narrative, the protagonist's personal identity includes a number of peculiarities transmitted through symbols, whether behavioral or imagetic. It is inferred that the symbolism of clothing expresses lifestyles and world views, also identified in groups like punk, grunge and raver, whose origins and forms of expression influences the creation of fashion trends. Based on the film's narrative studies and the sociology of everyday life, we created a jacket that symbolizes the urban tribe raver.Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Creative Copyright Notice
Policy for Free Access Journals
Authors who publish in this journal agree to the following terms:
1. Authors keep the copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication, with the work simultaneously licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which allows sharing the trial with acknowledgment of authorship and initial publication in this journal.
2. Authors are authorized to take additional contracts separately, for non-exclusive distribution of the work version, published in this journal (eg publish in institutional repository or as a book chapter), with acknowledgment of authorship and initial publication in this journal.
3. Authors are allowed and encouraged to publish and distribute their work online (eg in institutional repositories or on their personal page) at any point before or during the editorial process, as this can generate productive changes, as well as increase both impact and citation of the published trial (See The Effect of Free Access).
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial-shareaswell 4.0 International License, which allows you to share, copy, distribute, display, reproduce, completely or part of the work, since there is no commercial purpose, and authors and source are cited.