@Book{161778303X, author="Phạm, Minh-H{\`a} T.", title="Asians wear clothes on the internet: race, gender, and the work of personal style blogging", year="2015", publisher="Duke University Press", address="Durham", keywords="Fashion; Social aspects; Blogs; Asia; Asians; Clothing; Fashion writing", contents="The taste and aftertaste for Asian superbloggersStyle stories, written tastes, and the work of self-composure -- ``So many and all the same'' (but not quite) : outfit photos and the codes of Asian eliteness -- The racial and gendered job performances of fashion blogger poses -- Invisible labor and racial visibilities in outfit posts.", abstract="``In the first ever book devoted to a critical investigation of the personal style blogosphere, Minh-Ha T. Pham examines the phenomenal rise of elite Asian bloggers who have made a career of posting photographs of themselves wearing clothes on the Internet. Pham understands their online activities as ''taste work`` practices that generate myriad forms of capital for superbloggers and the brands they feature. A multifaceted and detailed analysis, Asians Wear Clothes on the Internet addresses questions concerning the status and meaning of ''Asian taste`` in the early twenty-first century, the kinds of cultural and economic work Asian tastes do, and the fashion public's and industry's appetite for certain kinds of racialized eliteness. Situating blogging within the historical context of gendered and racialized fashion work while being attentive to the broader cultural, technological, and economic shifts in global consumer capitalism, Asians Wear Clothes on the Internet has profound implications for understanding the changing and enduring dynamics of race, gender, and class in shaping some of the most popular work practices and spaces of the digital fashion media economy''--Back cover", note="Minh-Ha T. Pham", note="Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-245) and index", isbn="0822360152", language="English" }