Clothing the selF
Clothing The Self (Study I) investigates dressing as reflexive identity work in late modernity. While sociological research examines how clothing signals class and group membership, the intrapersonal experience of getting dressed remains unexplored. Drawing on qualitative interviews about wardrobe relationships and dressing practices, we reveal how clothing maintains identity amid institutional instability and fragmented selfhood. We find identity is fundamentally relational; dressing provides ontological security through reflexive material engagement; and individuals maintain spatial separations between alienated work and chosen home spaces through distinct clothing practices. These findings challenge identity work as self-focused individualism, revealing instead empathic collective engagement. Understanding dressing rituals is critical for addressing consumption patterns in sustainable fashion movements.
The Findings from Clothing The Self (Study I) are currently in review at Symbolic Interaction.
I will release information on where to access this peer-reviewed journal article once that information is made available.
We are now working on Clothing The Study (Study II): Identity Reconstruction and Ontological Security When Primary Material Resources Are Compromised, and Clothing The Self (Study III): Embodied Dressing and Visual Self-Monitoring: A Study of Everyday Life Without Mirrors.
Select storytelling on Herderin’s Journal page.
collaborators
alexis fujii, research coordinator
daniel schechter-saavedra, research assistant (interviewer)
alexandra nugent, research assistant (photographer & qualitative coder)