After graduating from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Queensland, she is currently enrolled in the Master's program at Osaka University's Graduate School of Humanities. Her specialties are feminist philosophy and fashion studies. By using women with ideal appearances as a clue, she analyzes the suffering of living as a norm and explore ways to escape from it through clothing.
There's an inexplicable unseriousness, a carefreeness about fashion. It seems to scoff at being overly serious. There's a deep distrust of seriousness. Somehow, this rebellious nature is intriguingly tied to a sense of beauty and morality. The feeling of being "dorky," the rigidity of a collaboratively fabricated order—fashion detests it the most.
Whether similarly or conversely, fashion as a phenomenon is something that authorities, institutions, and power structures (especially the state and schools) detest the most. The real reason might be that fashion's unseriousness, or the fact it has no concrete foundation, is actually what lies at the core of these structures.
In a society that praises seriousness, it exposes that it inherently possesses the most unserious structure. And there's a kind of unseriousness that won't even dedicate itself wholly to being unserious. (Washida 2012: 241-2)
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