英文摘要 |
"This article aims to inquire into the inner logic and its paradox of the “fast fashion” in the recent decade. In order to clarify the related elements, it describes two types of fast-fashion production: 1). a small masstige production system radiated from Dongdaemun (Seoul) to neighboring countries, which is driven by enormous flexible production units, customized design service, trans-national logistics and purveyor-broker’s network; 2). a mass production and global logistics system (Zara, H&M), which is characterized by their parity popularity and design plagiarism usually copied both indie designers and iconic designer brands. The purpose of this article is to suggest a socio-dynamic approach embracing three requirements of fast fashion: highest achievable velocity, stitching supply chain, mix-and-match style. Therefrom can be observed a “meme consumption” phenomena. Besides, this article tries to introduce the hipster-loop (an auto-computing model) to elucidate that the meme consumption leads to a state of being popular, while people seeks to be different from others at the same time. This implies a paradox of fast fashion: the faster it runs, the more it approximates to negate itself (becoming out-of-fashion) and shift to future style. This finding is heuristic as far as it corresponds to the consumption logic of contemporary society." |