Sunday, October 26, 2008

The Style Imperative


Style is more character than clothes, more attitude than affluence. It's you making visible your inner self. So forget what you learned about appearance not counting; you can no longer afford to be without style.

"Do designers dictate hemlines?" the late style doyenne Diana Vreeland was once asked. "Only if you take dictation," she replied.

With that remark she exposed a rift the fashion world seldom flaunts. There is a vast gap between fashion and style. Fashion is about clothes and their relationship to the moment. Style is about you and your relationship to yourself. Fashion is in the clothes. Style is in the wearer. The distinction could not be more revealing.

Despite the proliferation of fashion, style has been out of style for decades. As the economy expanded, America embarked on a collective shopping spree. In place of style we have honored Merchandise. Clothes. Style, on the other hand, doesn't demand a credit card. It prospers on courage and creativity.

Style goes way beyond fashion; it is an individually distinctive way of putting ourselves together. It is a unique blend of spirit and substance—personal identity imposed on, and created through, the world of things. It is a way of capturing something vibrant, making a statement about ourselves in clothes. It is what people really want when they aspire to be fashionable (if they aren't just adorning themselves in status symbols).

In some quarters, it's fashionable, as it were, to trivialize style. It's true that style doesn't have life-or-death impact, but it isn't devoid of substance, either. "Clothes are separated from all other objects by being inseparable from the self," Anne Hollander writes in her classic Seeing Through Clothes. "They give a visual aspect to consciousness itself." Through clothes, we reinvent ourselves every time we get dressed. Our wardrobe is our visual vocabulary. Style is our distinctive pattern of speech, our individual poetry.

Fashion is the least of it. Style is, for starters, one part identity: self-awareness and self-knowledge. You can't have style until you have articulated a self. And style requires security—feeling at home in one's body, physically and mentally. Of course, like all knowledge, self-knowledge must be updated as you grow and evolve; style takes ongoing self-assessment.

Style is also one part personality: spirit, verve, attitude, wit, inventiveness. It demands the desire and confidence to express whatever mood one wishes. Such variability is not only necessary but a reflection of a person's unique complexity as a human being. People want to be themselves and to be seen as themselves. In order to work, style must reflect the real self, the character and personality of the individual; anything less appears to be a costume.

Lastly, style is one part fashion. It's possible to have lots of clothes and not an ounce of style. But it's also possible to have very few clothes and lots of style. Yes, fashion is the means through which we express style, but it takes less in the way of clothes to be stylish than you might imagine. That's why generations of women have coveted the little black dress, a garment so unassuming in line and perfect in proportion that it is the finest foil for excursions into self-expression.

It's tempting to think that style is a new invention, open to us only now because we particularly value self-expression, and an extraordinary range of possibilities for doing so is available to us. But Joan DeJean, a professor of French language and culture at the University of Pennsylvania, contends that style has its well-shod feet firmly planted in the seventeenth century; it was the deliberate creation of Louis XIV of France, the Sun King. He was, she says in The Essence of Style, history's greatest exemplar of it.

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15 comments:

DRUM MAJOR said...

in my own interpatation i strongly agree that stlye is based on the person that presents it.Have you ever heard the phrase "beauty is in the eye of the beholder"... which makes it relevent that stlye is the foundation of fashion...

tamara romain said...

I think this piece is relevant to our society today. Fashion has become a part of us. It is how we carry ourselves in order to make it work. That is where style comes in. A person has to have the confidence to wear a flamboyant color. When a person lacks confidence in their selves they can not be unique.The clothes should not own you. You should own the clothes.

Wesly said...

Fashion is the way everyone live by today. Each person has their own style of fashion, but some people fashions are based upon what they see someone else famous wearing. I think that people should feel comfortable in whatever they where.

SP said...

Well, in my opinion, fashion is just a "trend". The newest clothes could come out, but it doesnt mean that one has to purchase it in order to have style. Style is based on the individual and their individuality. Once in Ms. Smith's class, she made a comparison between the style of two students who were wearing completely different clothing. However, although I cant remember two well, the point was to stress that the style between the two may be based on their own beliefs and ways of life. We should not be based on what we wear...as Wesly said, people should be comfortable with what they wear...

TOYA said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
TOYA said...

i feel that fashion is just a waist of time everytime a rapper wears somthing of hae something poeple want to go get it. in today's society we are hypnotized about clothes and shoes and dont realize on how much money we are waisting. are u serious i seen some jordans for $250 i went back 2 weeks later and those same jordans went down to $120. and i agree on wat tamara said the clothes shouldnt wear you... you should wear the clothes

"chachy" said...

I THINK STYLE IS SOMETHING MORE PERSONAL SOME OF US ARE MORE OUTGOING WITH THE WAY WE DRESS AND SOME OTHERS ARE MORE CONSERVATIVES. PEOPLE SHOULD JUST DRESS WITH WHATEVER MAKE THEM FEEL COMFORTABLE AND THAT SHOULD BE THEIR OWN STYLE INSTEAD OF MAKING A FOOL OF THEMSELVES TRYING TO FIT IN...

Ethel V. said...

It is true that style is a picture one paints for themselves to cherish and portrait. As Robert quoted,"beauty is in the eye of the beholder". Time after time people lose understanding of that concept, and just follow even the most bizarre fashions. Coming from me, style is your idea of presentation and comfort. And in actuality, people famous usually go by that while fans simply duplicate their style.That isn't always the case though...

sharon black said...

I believe that people are entitled to their own expressions. People show the way they feel through the way they dress. I believe that style shouldnt be the only way of expressing yourself because it tend to get out of hand. other people look at other people's fashion and judge them based on that. you might wear a red dress and red pumps to show how mature you've become as a person, but other people look at you as a hoochie or wanting the wrong attention. people are bold when they choose what the want to wear. they wear their cloths to show their confidence.

Naomie said...

A person makes something look nice. Each person carries a different style and the confidence that comes with it. The "in" fashion might not go hand-in-hand with the person's swagger. Like drum major said, beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

batman6 said...

in my opinion i believe that many people have many different styles..or in my grammer(SWAG)...i think my swag is different from alot of people because i care alot about how i dress and the way i look..but there is other people who careless about the way they look..they just wana be and feel comfortable..

tell said...

well i think that style is the way a preson express theirselves... some people copy the style to fit in and some people make thier own style to to stand out and be themselves... i feel that style and fashion is highly over rated.

Emmanuel Demosthene said...

Fashion has become dominant in the america of today. But for the choice few that remain their own people, style will never die. People can still be acknowledged by their unique, individual style, even if they are wearing the same thing as everyone else.

"It's not about what you wear, it's how you wear it..."
- Emmanuel Demosthene

sophomore status said...

It's not what you wear but it's how you were it. I do believe that people get to wrapped up in worrying about what other people think. Instead they should worry about what they feel and how good they think they look.

lovemonkey305 said...

I learned something new today! To me, style is different for everyone. I have my own and everyone has theirs. It is one of the very things that makes us who we are. What the general public considers as style does not apply to everyone. It is what makes us so different form one another and also attract one another as well. Sometimes I think that a lot of people don't want their style to be made public because of what others might say or think of them. It is this that causes them to adopt what seems to be popular at the moment as their own personal style when really on the inside, they aren't being true their own sense of style.

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Miami, FL, United States
I teach AP Psychology, American Government, Economics, American History, World History, and Inquiry Skills at Miami Edison Senior High, where we are "Rising to the Challenge!"