<< 1 >>   
Rating:   Summary: Center/Fold Review: For any reader who has had a father that read *Playboy* "for the articles," even Barthes' highly analytical approach to the relation between image and text--which he insists *produces* Fashion or "real clothing"--can be funny. I.e., reading in translation the American reader may not identify so much with the eccentricities of Barthes' style so much as his choice of subject. Barthes' work remains entirely relevant, even though the book was published in 1967--the decade where fashion models withered, along with any grand sense of ethics on the part of commercial artists, clothing designers, and filmmakers, down to nothing. Perhaps Barthes would say this Nothing was a *commentary.* Perhaps not. But certain details of Barthes' analysis hold very interesting still: for example, the fact that Barthes refers to the way the "written-garment" in a layout calls attention to specific portions of the "image-garment" as "amputations" (15). For the reader, it's important to place the book into some sort of context, as Context is Barthes' entire position when he insists that in relation to popular imagery, text "arrests the level of reading at its fabric, at its belt, at the accessory which adorns it" (13). Barthes' idea that the language used by magazine writers does not comment upon but rather *creates* Fashion arouses some questions about certain social centerpieces in, for example, popular (once "folk") music: Janis Joplin to Madonna to Britney Spears. While Barthes clear interest is a structuralized definition of Fashion, not women, studying Barthes' book may help us understand at a more analytical level just what these women "mean" as they are mediated through imagery and arrested by their respective (worn and written) articles. Barthes is crucial for anybody who has ever noticed that, compared to that which accompanied artists of Joplin's caliber , the accompanying texts of contemporary magazines read, more often than not, like a report of Time Temperature and Date.  Furthermore, the book certainly becomes enjoyable for the more fantastic-minded who could envision a day when fashion magazines no longer have to rely on flamboyant nudity, tasteful or otherwise, or suggestive postures, but wherein nudity and erotic positions are implied in a truly Barthean, truly erotic manner: by the fact that all text has been stripped bare. After all, even in a picture-mag where there is no writing, there is still, if one reads Barthes, *writing*. This reviewer would imagine that in Barthes' eyes, the old fashioned critique of the ironic incongruities between the image and the text of other vestments of fashion (such as shampoo commercials whose orgiastic imagery and sounds have nothing to do with the actual product) could be easily solved by one magazine, of any kind, that had no writing at all but consisted entirely of centerfolds.
  Rating:   Summary: Center/Fold Review: For any reader who has had a father that read *Playboy* "for the articles," even Barthes' highly analytical approach to the relation between image and text--which he insists *produces* Fashion or "real  clothing"--can be funny.  I.e., reading in translation the American  reader may not identify so much with the eccentricities of Barthes' style  so much as his choice of subject.  Barthes' work remains entirely relevant,  even though the book was published in 1967--the decade where fashion models  withered, along with any grand sense of ethics on the part of commercial  artists, clothing designers, and filmmakers, down to nothing.  Perhaps  Barthes would say this Nothing was a *commentary.*  Perhaps not.  But  certain details of Barthes' analysis hold very interesting still:  for  example, the fact that Barthes refers to the way the  "written-garment" in a layout calls attention to specific  portions of the "image-garment" as "amputations" (15).     For the reader, it's important to place the book into some sort of  context, as Context is Barthes' entire position when he insists that in  relation to popular imagery, text "arrests the level of reading at its  fabric, at its belt, at the accessory which adorns it" (13).  Barthes'  idea that the language used by magazine writers does not comment upon but  rather *creates*  Fashion arouses some questions about certain social  centerpieces in, for example, popular (once "folk") music:  Janis  Joplin to Madonna to Britney Spears.  While Barthes clear interest is a  structuralized definition of Fashion, not women,  studying Barthes' book  may help us understand at a more analytical level just what these women  "mean" as they are mediated through imagery and arrested by their  respective (worn and written) articles.  Barthes is crucial for anybody who  has ever noticed that,  compared to that which accompanied artists of  Joplin's caliber , the accompanying texts of contemporary magazines read,  more often than not, like a report of Time Temperature and Date.      Furthermore, the book certainly becomes enjoyable for the more  fantastic-minded who could envision a day when fashion magazines no longer  have to rely on flamboyant nudity, tasteful or otherwise, or suggestive  postures, but wherein nudity and erotic positions are implied in a truly  Barthean, truly erotic manner:  by the fact that all text has been stripped  bare.  After all, even in a picture-mag where there is no writing, there is  still, if one reads Barthes, *writing*.  This reviewer would imagine that  in Barthes' eyes, the old fashioned critique of the ironic incongruities  between the image and the text of other vestments of fashion (such as  shampoo commercials whose orgiastic imagery and sounds have nothing to do  with the actual product) could be easily solved by one magazine, of any  kind, that had no writing at all but consisted entirely of centerfolds.
 
 
  << 1 >>   
 |