student demonstrations that have become "fashion" shows the movement may be neutralized by the same forces who fights
Visit any branch of Topshop this weekend and see a curious thing: shirts that seem to mock the student protests this winter - the student protests which has been a target Topshop of choice. "The students are rebelling," said t-shirts.
One could be forgiven for thinking that the design is impotent rebuttal Arcadia boss Sir Philip Green to protest against taxes, avoiding the empire. Perhaps the conclusion that revenge is a dish best served fashion. I'm not so sure: if there is anything that defines Topshop, young athletes are ironic slogans. It is much more likely to Topshop brand gurus saw the opportunity to sell your customers something Zeitgeist, and it was not frivolous. I guess I had pictures of students protesting outside their shops decorated in underwear.
- most activists are smart enough to know that the slogans are simply insurgency shirt Nike shoes, but perhaps the blame can not be completely trends in mercenaries of capitalism. Perhaps we should consider that the commodification of a movement known about the public image of the movement itself, and if you have to change. Historically, fashion is not to be guided by the dominant culture, but the sub-cultures - is flirting with Sienna Miller Bohemia, heroin chic, often appearing on the catwalks in the 1990s. Similarly, the commodification of the student movement is a testament to his media image fresh and sexy, but also increasingly seen as a sub-culture exists separately from the lives of ordinary people - something that can now be packaged and sold to other like fashion sense. comparison, the UK uncut protest in Camden, where parents and activists has become a NatWest in a day, will never be put on a shirt. It was too sweet, too serious to give fashion designers of the type required for customers to tip. Charlie Gilmour could not have been present in his costume designer, but the protest was only rebels Camden, precisely because the British half courted so often wooed by politicians. British protests uncut can be boring for journalists and designers looking for the next big thing, but these protests have led to additional training sessions for government employees, not the assault on the Tory headquarters.
mass movements do not come from department stores or social networks, but ordinary people are collectively recognize that something in society is broken and must be fixed. As the courts begin to permeate our daily lives, the student movement must ensure that it is considered part of the fabric of society, not a subversive subculture that can be sold for the same systems as objects . Indeed, only when dissent becomes ordinary and unglamorous real social change can happen -. And it's very important to be put on any shirt
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