Description

Book Synopsis
In 2016, social media users in Thailand called out the Paris-based luxury fashion house Balenciaga for copying the popular Thai “rainbow bag,” using Balenciaga’s hashtags to circulate memes revealing the source of the bags’ design. In Why We Can’t Have Nice Things Minh-Ha T. Pham examines the way social media users monitor the fashion market for the appearance of knockoff fashion, design theft, and plagiarism. Tracing the history of fashion antipiracy efforts back to the 1930s, she foregrounds the work of policing that has been tacitly outsourced to social media. Despite the social media concern for ethical fashion and consumption and the good intentions behind design policing, Pham shows that it has ironically deepened forms of social and market inequality, as it relies on and reinforces racist and colonial norms and ideas about what constitutes copying and what counts as creativity. These struggles over ethical fashion and intellectual property, P

Trade Review
"Pham’s work offers a thorough look at how online behavior is shaping fashion industry actions and sheds light on the ways the current norms are failing some communities while granting protections to others."
-- Sarah Bartlett Schroeder * Library Journal *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction. “Share This with Your Friends”: Crowdsourcing IP Regulation 1
1. Regulating Fashion IP, Regulating Difference 27
2. The Asian Fashion Copycat 53
3. How Thai Social Media Users Made Balenciaga Pay for Copying the Sampeng Bag 77
4. “Ppl Knocking Each Other off Lol”: Diet Prada’s Politics of Refusal 99
Epilogue. Why We Can't Have Nice Things 125
Notes 131
Bibliography 147
Index 165

Why We Cant Have Nice Things

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    A Paperback / softback by Minh-Ha T. Pham

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 13/09/2022
      ISBN13: 9781478018612, 978-1478018612
      ISBN10: 1478018615

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In 2016, social media users in Thailand called out the Paris-based luxury fashion house Balenciaga for copying the popular Thai “rainbow bag,” using Balenciaga’s hashtags to circulate memes revealing the source of the bags’ design. In Why We Can’t Have Nice Things Minh-Ha T. Pham examines the way social media users monitor the fashion market for the appearance of knockoff fashion, design theft, and plagiarism. Tracing the history of fashion antipiracy efforts back to the 1930s, she foregrounds the work of policing that has been tacitly outsourced to social media. Despite the social media concern for ethical fashion and consumption and the good intentions behind design policing, Pham shows that it has ironically deepened forms of social and market inequality, as it relies on and reinforces racist and colonial norms and ideas about what constitutes copying and what counts as creativity. These struggles over ethical fashion and intellectual property, P

      Trade Review
      "Pham’s work offers a thorough look at how online behavior is shaping fashion industry actions and sheds light on the ways the current norms are failing some communities while granting protections to others."
      -- Sarah Bartlett Schroeder * Library Journal *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments vii
      Introduction. “Share This with Your Friends”: Crowdsourcing IP Regulation 1
      1. Regulating Fashion IP, Regulating Difference 27
      2. The Asian Fashion Copycat 53
      3. How Thai Social Media Users Made Balenciaga Pay for Copying the Sampeng Bag 77
      4. “Ppl Knocking Each Other off Lol”: Diet Prada’s Politics of Refusal 99
      Epilogue. Why We Can't Have Nice Things 125
      Notes 131
      Bibliography 147
      Index 165

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