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Elizabeth Wissinger

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Oct 12, 2015, 12:24:07 PM10/12/15
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From: The Committee on Globalization and Social Change <global...@gc.cuny.edu>
Date: Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 8:59 AM
Subject: Tomorrow: Global Fashion Capitals Conference
To: matt...@gmail.com


Global Fashion Capitals: A one-day symposium
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CONFERENCE

Global Fashion Capitals Conference

Tuesday, October 13th • 1:30–7:30pm
Proshansky Auditorium, CUNY Graduate Center

The multilayered identity of New York as a global fashion capital has long been defined by the history of the garment industry, fashion and labor. The cultures and economies of the fashion industry and the city of New York have been and continue to be intertwined. The cultural economic impact of the fashion industry on New York City cannot be overstated. New York City’s fashion industry employs 180,000 people and accounts for 6% of the city workforce, generating $10.9 billion a year in total wages, and tax revenues of $2 billion. An estimated 900 fashion companies are headquartered in the city. New York Fashion Week contributes about $850 million a year to the local economy—about twice the economic impact of the 2014 Super Bowl.

Fashion is more than ever part of a wider landscape that intersects with other creative industries (media, visual arts, design, film, craft). Fashion, its manufacturing and culture industry, and its complex media apparatus have contributed to the transformation and histories of several world cities. In many cases, as in New York City, women and immigrants were largely responsible for building the garment industry; and it was their work that intersected with social reforms, political activism, gradual urban transformation and processes of globalization and gentrification.

Some of the questions the conference will address are:

  1. How and why does a city become a Global Fashion Capital?
  2. What role do the social media and the post-digital experience of today play?
  3. How can labor, craft and design survive in the era of Instagram?
  4. How do new technologies and big data affect our ways of life, thinking and consuming the city in the city?
  5. Is there a new rhythm analysis that needs to be understood?
  6. And how can we strengthen our right to the city and allow a new humanitarian sensibility and politics?

The morning session will take place on the FIT campus and will consist of a student fair, where visitors can interact with members of the international fashion community. The morning will also include a fashion show featuring five designers from emerging fashion capitals and a panel discussion moderated by MFIT curators Ariele Elia and Elizabeth Way. For more information about the morning session at FIT, please visit: https://www.fitnyc.edu/24347.asp 

The afternoon session will take place at the Graduate Center, CUNY, in the Proshansky Auditorium.

This one-day symposium is presented by Fashion Studies at The Graduate Center and the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies, in collaboration with the School of Visual, Media & Performing Arts at Brooklyn College and The Museum at FIT, and the support of Women’s Studies Certificate Program, the Master in Women’s StudiesThe Committee on Globalization and Social ChangeData & Society, and The Futures Initiative.

Copyright © 2015 The Committee on Globalization and Social Change, All rights reserved.
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Elizabeth Wissinger PhD 
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Author of This Year's Model (NYU Press, 2015)

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Data & Society Affiliate (www.datasociety.net)
@datasociety

Associate Professor Fashion Studies 
City University of New York Master's Program in Fashion Studies
http://fashioncuny.commons.gc.cuny.edu
@CUNYfashion

Associate Professor of Sociology
BMCC Department of Social Science 
Room N651K
199 Chambers Street 
New York, NY 10007 
212 220-8000 x7459 
@betsywiss

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