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164 Photo Collage, A&F Quarterly images taken (1999–2006) 165 Over the past twelve years the retail clothing company Abercrombie & Fitch (A&F) has generated much fiscal success, along with critical attention in widespread media coverage. In response analysts have praised the retailer for its annual increase in net profits while critics have vilified the company for its aesthetic elitism and highly erotic image campaigns. Moreover, what is extraordinary about the discussion of A&F is an unwavering curiosity of why so many consumers are motivated to purchase a brand that in its visual representation excludes them. However, what pales in comparison to such an ambivalent curiosity is an inability to discuss the irrational tendencies, visual nuances, and structural fissures that inform commodity expression and identification. In the wake of a $40-million settlement responding to allegations of racial and gender discrimination, what is often unexplored is how the company has culled ideals of leisure, freedom, and authenticity into a brand image that functions to obscure multiple strands of discrimination with taste, style, and distinction.1 Providing a more relational account I will follow the visual and textual rhetoric used in A&F’s marketing images to commodify social values for viewer identification. In doing so, I aim in this project to trace how social structures of marginalization operate, whereby the viewer is asked to participate in an iteration of its logic. Highlighting this interchange will reveal the underlying fictions that function and succeed in today’s apparel market and illustrate how its imagery can feed off and coproduce rhetoric of the dominant culture. Inscribing Tradition In the last decade of the twentieth century, a new campaign of Abercrombie & Fitch images emerged. Following a distinctive brand history of importing British fashions to America’s elite, this moment marked a significant shift in the company’s marketing strategy. Advertising Director Sam Shahid and photographer Bruce Weber were brought in to develop a new visual identity for the A&F brand. The two were known for the fresh energy they brought to marketing and advertising campaigns in the 1980s; whose sexual provocation stirred up major controversy and profitability for clients such as Calvin Klein and Banana Republic. Abercrombie & Fitch endorsed this team to produce a similar image campaign that celebrated sexuality and what’s “cool” to reach the company’s new target market: college kids with disposable income. The images alone purveyed an artful life and well-defined physicality to much delight. Abercrombie customers could see, discern meaning, and inscribe their taste amongst such newly informed images. Adding to this revision, nostalgia became a strong element to continue A&F’s inherited tradition, yet with a twist; instead of selling outdoors gear, the new look for A&F was vintage. What appeared to be another leisure brand profiting from its prestige pricing, like Banana Republic, Eddie Bauer, and J. Crew, was in fact a new store with an old name waiting to be discovered by a younger generation. Aimed to distinguish its brand from peers, A&F used the provocative imagery to communicate a highly aestheticized model of authenticity. Such unprecedented imagery was an essential ele- 166 ment of the retailer’s visual display. Large-format black-and-white photographs that depicted highly intimate and sensuously charged photography representing joy, attraction, and desire lured consumers into the store’s otherwise traditional-looking space. In 1994 I was an unknowing consumer who was enticed by A&F’s provocative imagery and time-honored grandeur. Inside the store large wooden roundtables and deep-textured carpets emitted an aura of an old lodge, emblematic of a classical era—or more distinctly its rewards. A trophy of great sportsmanship—the head of a bull moose—was mounted on the wall beyond the checkout counter. A seemingly simple artifact of an outdoors theme was rather an invocation of Teddy Roosevelt and the nickname of his Progressive Party. The symbolic moose contained a deeper metaphor for virility and conquest, one that would later become the chosen logo of A&F’s new image. The function of Abercrombie & Fitch’s visual strategy was to persuade consumers to partake in a style of the past and render themselves timeless through commodity expression: an Oxford shirt, a belt, and jeans—style for their identity. I perceived these artifacts as social agreements, projections, and acknowledgements of a shared system of behaviors. As a result, I participated in a new club that was forming, one that upheld nostalgia as its belief, yet only for those in the know. In his book Brand Hijack: Marketing without Marketing, marketing consultant Alex Wipperfurth discusses how consumers tend to claim brand identity to communicate their membership to a particular lifestyle, association, or activity. This theory is substantiated when looking at the brand loyalty that is exhibited in relation to Abercrombie & Fitch, whose brand has become a social badge for its consumers and employees, lending them cachet or an aura of privilege and entitlement.2 Consequently distinction is seen, rendered intelligible, and thus perceived as a plausible social fact. To great effect it seems that a vintage look provided by Abercrombie & Fitch hearkened on its cultural value more than its ability to look exclusive. A cultural value informed by an a history of wealth, social standing, and to some degree WASP lineage, which has nuanced my claim on distinction because—depending on who and what was being excluded—one always can be seen as something other than what one claims to be.3 This dynamic has repeatedly demonstrated itself in my life and in particular to my experience with the A&F brand and the preppy image it evoked. As a youth inculcated with ideals of gallantry, will, and distinction I fit this image—a character of ambition who could develop the wit, intelligence, and chops to find success in any social environment. Or so I felt the image fit me. It greatly influenced my social manner, tastes, and preferences, all shared expressions of status and association upper-class citizens once used to express refinement, secure lineage, and preserve privilege. Similarly, donning the look of a preparatory school upbringing has often allowed visibility (more so to some than to others). Depending on the social context Abercrombie & Fitch clothing has styled me in various ways, as I’ve been identified as a “sell-out,” conservative, privileged or acceptable, but nevertheless authentic. 167 Outfitting: Conquest and Preservation Near the end of the nineteenth century a series of events were happening in the United States as the country was vying to establish itself as an imperial nation. Two major shifts left a significant impact in the role of business, social identification, and the citizenry. The first being the back-to-nature and Progressive movements; the second, a shift in the use of advertisements intended to assuage desire through a sense of social mobility and style. Largely influenced by newly developing theories in psychoanalysis, Roy Sheldon and Egmont Arens wrote an influential business guide in 1932, called Consumer Engineering,4 in which the authors recommended that businesses start to design products that would exploit the sublimated senses of their consumers. Sheldon and Arens believed that by catering to human senses products created with prehension in mind could promise consumer pleasure and increase profitability; and as Stuart Ewen has suggested, the imaginations of citizens had become a new target for manipulation. The two recognized the limited-life span of trends in the marketplace and constructed a strategy for industries to focus on maintaining consumer interest in consumption. They imagined an unlimited potential for the role of mass media to carry out this agenda. Between 1890 and 1930 the back-to-nature and Progressive movements reached their height. The relationship between nature and class privilege was a particularly nuanced one; many U.S. citizens were becoming discontent about class relations and the rise in economic determinism.5 Wealthy North American citizens of the time were becom- ing uncertain of their fate in the face of powerrising reform movements. As a result, they collectively committed their monies and resources to promote ways to maintain a dominant order. They believed that scientific research, education, and reform methods were viable efforts to thwart antagonistic outcomes from the resisting classes. In the name of science and intellectual enrichment, ideal citizens—those who could accept a predetermined truth—would be cultivated through efforts of exhibition, conservation, and eugenics. Such an agenda was a beneficial link to the spirited man of the time, Theodore Roosevelt. An adventurer and man of conquest, Roosevelt was known for his great hunting escapades and safari expeditions. The “rough rider” and frequent customer of Abercrombie & Fitch slaughtered thousands of animals under the premise of restoring “nature” (and some would say man’s domination over it). This agenda would link him to the wealthy and elite whose political goals, informed by socialDarwinism and fear, were also thought of as a form of restoration: interventions for the greater excellence of mankind, saving humans from detrimental activities of labor uprisings, or the ails of miscegenation. Scholar Anne McClintock argues that imperial power and its formation were tied to domestic relations and the invention of industrial progress.6 It was under these shifting forms of knowledge and power that distinction and hierarchies were created, resulting in peculiar forms of public and private identifications. This was when the invention of race became a necessary element to legitimate groups of people, as well as to police those designated as a threat. Tied to masculinity 168 left: Abercrombie & Fitch excerpt, New York Times (1918)] right: Abercrombie & Fitch ad excerpt, New York Times (1921)] 169 and notions of manifest destiny, this occidental process was deployed domestically, as well as internationally. Abercrombie & Fitch’s role in this development was that it catered to such ideological motivations. The company reflected and enacted the logic of imperialism, social engineering, and the ritual of hunting so that it could more easily outfit the dominant class. In 1917 Abercrombie & Fitch opened its second store in New York on Madison Avenue, a geographic site that has been synonymous with the history of twentieth-century advertising in North America. There the company established its business niche, “Where the Blazed Trail Crosses the Boulevard,” that became the inscribed motto for visiting patrons to reflect on as they entered the store. Located at Madison Avenue and 45th Street the store occupied twelve stories, with a pool and log cabin on the roof, each intended to recreate a scene from New York’s upstate wilderness. Below, each floor featured displays that resembled dioramas showed a vast assortment of sporting gear and goods, such as camping, hunting, fishing, archery, and skiing equipment. Patrons with a penchant for the outdoors could shop and test the functionality of all gear and equipment onsite. Daily press advertisements were run in the New York Times to promote the store and its merchandise. Monochromatic images, both text and image were aimed at a select class of consumers (wealthy, literate, European American, and Protestant); each advertisement was infused with tales of evolution, adventure, and authentic tradition. This is evidenced in the company’s “The Two Frontiers” ad taken from a New York Times 1918 daily (see Figure 1). For some patrons A&F was simply a retailer with the goods needed for their lifestyle activities. For others, it offered a means to align oneself with the dominant ideals of the time—leisure, sport, and travel—all of which could be conveyed through an A&F outfit. Coupled with confirming masculinity as a requisite quality of sportsmen the rhetorical form in “The Two Frontiers” ad draws upon ideals of conquest and precedence to promote military men and sportsmen together, correlating game hunting to warfare. The text in this ad reads, “[f ]rom the Little Bighorn, where the frontiersmen trail the grizzly, to the shell-holes and hell-holes where the Allies trail the Hun.” With the tone and syntax of this text denying an author and replacing it with a collective authority the rhetoric in this ad, in effect, is more than a sales pitch. Another passage reads, “[t]his store was built to help the sportsman hunt big game–enjoy the freedom of Everyman’s blessed democracy of the woods, the hills and the plains. True to its purpose, it is whole-heartedly engaged in assisting the soldier–the modern crusader whose sportsmanlike duty is to exterminate the greatest enemy of civilization.”7 This passage reveals the commercial interest of its producers that aligns the company with the dominant cultural values of the time, thereby promoting annihilation as an expression of possessiveness; where the call to kill the Hun is not made through an evidentiary claim of supremacy, it is instead set up as a designation of responsibility beyond judgment. The simple nature of the ad’s image does create an illusion. Informed by illustrative style and text, markers of gender, class, and complexion are 170 provided for a viewing customer to recognize and engage. Under closer scrutiny the gendered archetypes within this ad provide no physiognomic effect. Yet unlike the characters’ inscrutable physical representations, the white space in the ad loosely operates as a marker of skin, as each outfits’ detail functions as an operative cue. Likewise, the image begins to commodify information asking for identification; in this case two white men: modern crusader and frontiersman. In other ads, Abercrombie & Fitch makes an appeal to a discriminating taste, whereby an imagined visualization is facilitated through a description of the British fabric (figure 2). “Tweeds, homespuns, English cheviots... Scotch sporting fabrics” are the textual descriptors taken from another New York Times ad titled “Clothes Which Show Their Origin,” where an emphasis is attributed to texture and fabric as indicators of social and economic origin—their superior crafting to be seen and known by any anglophile.8 Subsequent to the aesthetic tradition authored by adventurers and “ready-made warriors” like Teddy Roosevelt, Richard Byrd, Amelia Earhart, and Charles Lindbergh a new form of leisure emerged in light of an expanding culture of consumerism. Still, inspired by a “yearn” for the outdoors luminaries such as Ernest Hemmingway, Katherine Hepburn, and John F. Kennedy were the new patrons of the Abercrombie & Fitch ideal, each confirming the brand’s designation of luxury, and transforming its customers’ identity from that of the adventure seeking sportsman/sportswoman, to the trendy “outdoorsman.” This predominately wealthy, European American preserve of “Ameri- ca’s elite” carried cultural capital over empirical knowledge and tactical skill.9 It was a generation of emulation and they wore the Abercrombie & Fitch brand to signify their dynamic lifestyle, as well as their aesthetic taste. Leisure: Distinction and Decline Theorist Stuart Ewen describes an emphasis on projecting a lifestyle over an actual experience as a pretension of significance, implied through nonverbal cues often regarded as style and persona. He suggests that it is through these details that one develops a manner of authenticity by objectifying one’s own subjectivity for public display.10 To this extent sportspersons’ characters were identified and defined by their leisurely activities. In a similar fashion, the leisurely traveler and adventure-seeking explorer were seen and understood by their manner and aura. Over time, the sportspersons’ activities shifted from the safari expeditions to safer more recreational activities, such as fishing and golf. Intertwined with notions of vitality and dexterity, as championed in the early press campaigns, physical traits as well as stylistic choices of Abercrombie & Fitch’s customers were becoming qualified in the ethos of the brand. Affluent men and women and their most discernable features were being mirrored by a brand as it continued to cater to a more exclusive class of consumers. Despite shifting changes in public taste and an expanding middle-class whose consumption patterns provided it access to a symbolic claim of distinction through social artifacts, the Abercrombie & Fitch ideal remained prevalent well into the 171 late 1970s as it was maintained through its exclusive patronage and expensive prices. Yet its inability to keep the company and brand in pace with economic and social shifts in taste created financial troubles for the outfitter by the 1960s and 70s. In contrast to previous eras, the antiestablishment culture of late 60s and 70s proved to be a significant obstacle. Popular fashion was unconventional and in direct critique with convention and uniformity. Under these changes in popular culture, many clothing retailers were able to reposition themselves with “off-price” selling; A&F with its high-end specialized goods was not able to adjust as well. As a result the company filed for bankruptcy in the late seventies. In a 1987 Forbes article Ellen Paris once commented on an element of Abercrombie & Fitch’s troubles: “the number of sportsmen able or willing to buy $50,000 Holland & Holland shotguns or $500 Hardy fishing rods dwindled sharply. Sporting goods became a mass, not a class, market.”11 Under new ownership Abercrombie & Fitch continued to operate, but by the turn of the 1980s it was in fact a complex entity rife with economic trouble and an unstable market presence. A sporting-goods retailer, Oshman’s purchased the company to leverage its own expanding business on the cultural equity associated with the Abercrombie & Fitch name. After incorporating a new mix of merchandising (exercise and home-recreational equipment) to appeal to a broader consumer base, more and more loyal customers had become confused with the Abercrombie & Fitch brand, others disgraced.12 Embodiment: Preppy Fashion and Mobility In 1988 Leslie Wexner, owner of The Limited Brands, acquired Abercrombie & Fitch. A selfmade man from the Midwest who had, over forty years, turned a small women’s store into a $9 billion empire, “the world’s largest specialty fashion retailer” could see the incongruence in the Abercrombie & Fitch brand and thus wanted to recreate the retailer’s image.13 Well into the nineties, the company began to redirect its marketing from sportsmen of another era to college kids by turning the style of its goods to a classic preparatory school look. Here we have three models garbed in what many customers and noncustomers see as “the A&F Look”: a “preppy” look heavily influenced by an earlier century model of upper-class fashion (figure 3). It was composed of a relatively conservative fashion of classic Oxford shirts, sports jackets, and casual trousers. Following World War II this look has been a popular and well-identified marker of status, wealth, and privilege throughout the twentieth century. In a similar manner, the post-Vietnam War period of the late 70s and 80s brought a return to conservatism. Rejecting the unconventional styles of beat, hippie, and bohemian cultures, younger generations culled a uniformly conventional aesthetic to distance themselves from their contemporaries by projecting their class distinction, national pride, and even their sophistication. Viewing this catalogue image from right to left, a short-haired man outfitted with a corduroy sports jacket with underlying plaid shirt and striped tie, bears a t-shirt with an A&F crest. A woman is placed squarely next 172 to him with her hands resting in her pockets and plaid scarf around her neck, tucked into her fully buttoned peacoat. She is a keystone. Adjacent to her left shoulder is another man in complementary attire who joins her gaze in addressing the viewer. Surprisingly, this field of gray matter constitutes a value of truth: the clothing details that make distinction visible. What the viewer sees are three models donning a preppy look. One does not know their bonds; therefore the viewer is left with only their physical orientations to infer meaning. The term preppy became the informal term used to denote a lifestyle traditionally found in the Northeast region of the United States. It was a subculture grounded on privilege and entitlement, and what Abercrombie & Fitch describes as an, “East Coast heritage and Ivy League tradition,” known for etiquette and codes of dress historically associated with white Anglo-Saxon Protestants (WASPs), it has become an identifiable aesthetic through which style and manner alike could be seen and used to display identity, or one’s sense of self. Through nonverbal markers and a surface detail of preppiness, lives were assumed to be affluent. Conversely, the actual Prep-school student whose inherited lifestyle had become an inspiration for the “vintage” fashion being sold at Abercrombie & Fitch wore clothing that was marked by less visible cues and more punctilious traditions—practices used to qualify exclusivity. Lisa Birnbach, in her satirical guide, The Official Preppy Handbook, describes some of the less familiar aspects of upperclass fashion and social custom in the chapter “Ten Underlying Principles for Men and Women”: Amateur historians have speculated that Preppies all dress alike because they got in the habit from wearing school uniforms. Not so. Preppies dress alike because their wardrobes are formed according to fundamental principles that they absorb from their parents and their peers. And although the Preppy Look can be imitated, non-preps are sometimes exposed by their misunderstanding or ignorance of these unspoken rules [conservatism, neatness, attention to detail, practicality, quality, natural fibers, anglophilia, specific color blindness, the sporting look, and androgyny].14 For those who subscribed to the “codes of conduct” described in her book, it provided some of the most unexplored elements of having been from wealth, offering the choice of colleges, style of dress, and athletic sports as cues of ritual for those aspiring to have the requisite taste of the upper class (figure 4). In the United States a sense of social mobility transcended wealth and lineage; celebrity came to personify an ostentative existence. The popular media friendly persona emanated superficiality. This led to a shift from desiring the new and artificial to a nostalgic return to the authentic and subtle, those things that could be associated with a past period. The company’s revisionist marketing of upper-class clothing took an element of the outdoors, such as the jean pant, and meshed it with sports coats, an Oxford shirt, and a tie to present a less rigid characteristic of luxury (figure 173 figure 3 (left): A&F Quarterly, Fall (2000) figure 4, 5 & 6 (above): A&F Quarterly, Winter (1999); Christmas Edition (2002) 174 5). Set in outdoor elements, such as the cabin, a top hat, and steer-buckled belt recall elements of adventure, dandyism, and freedom. Each line of clothing was tailored after an aspect of preparatory school life. Fittingly branded with an imperfect silk screen-printed “A&F” team logo or insignia similar to a boarding school or Ivy League crest these shirts carried with them a sense of wear and ownership. Providing an affective ruse of a “handme-down” or a family relic, Abercrombie & Fitch’s new designs conjured a history more personal and sentimental than its mass-produced origin. Using the descriptor “vintage” an association to the authenticity became a strong element to continue Abercrombie & Fitch’s tradition of distinction in a similar way British fabrics were purveyed in its earlier ads. Each sequence enacts flashes of a private affair that conveys commonsense displays of youthful exuberance and leisure. For a genuine effect, nude bodies set against open, outdoor space draw on a symbolic order of authenticity attached to nature (figure 6). Two topless models, a man and woman, frolic in arcane waters. Viewers witness a muscular and toned man as he grabs a slender woman by her waist and pulls her into the water. Here the slight detail of an A&F g-string locates the Abercrombie character, her hair and facial expression indicate this sudden occurrence may have caught her off-guard, her arms stretch to brace herself. The man pulling her smiles as his arms clutch and direct her destination. This veritable performance of freedom and power uses sprightly bodies to accentuate and confirm genderbased expectations of virility that bear entitlement over the effeminate. In figure 4 we a see a man sporting a white shirt, tie, and sweater; the disheveled collar of his shirt, along with the stretched neckline of his sweater, provide the viewer with cues of history and functional wear. This is a model sporting a new line of clothing offered through Abercrombie and Fitch’s Winter 1999 edition of A&F Quarterly, a magazine catalog hybrid used to promote the Abercrombie ideal. Instead of highlighting the clothing’s newness with crisp photography and a fullfigured display, this image instead projects an aura of embodiment through a softer more personal image. The model addresses the viewer unassumingly as the plaid interior of his jacket encodes cues of ethnic lineage upon which viewers may reminisce. Nothing stands out; each article of clothing is symbolically ordered to hint a lifestyle and personality of the body it covers. The physical attributes of this model—brown hair, reddish and primrose skin—offer a depiction of European physiognomy while his slightly disordered clothes convey details of British fabric and preppy attire. In this image style and persona are offered as fantastical alternatives; legible and systematic meaning is diffused for its determined placement within a larger social order. Unnoticeable is how this advertisement image seamlessly expands the idea of a preppy look beyond its own governance. Such a depiction creates a casual look of luxury—one that is displaced for consumers who cared about quality, but were unready for a refined dressed code. Similar to imagery from earlier-century campaigns, the simple nature of this advertisement image also creates an illusion. A fantastical alternative is offered to consumers as casual luxury. 175 It is in this alternative space the “cool kids” are those who are conservatively dressed and outfitted with enough cultural capital to fit in wherever. However, like all forms of expression the systems that allow them meaning also carry historical determinations. In a gesture, a marginalized exterior remains. Illustrated in the following scene, an A&F character demonstrates his chops as he dances during a visit to Harlem’s famous Lennox Lounge jazz club (figure 7). In this particular context, social hierarchies of gender, race, class, and their relative positions amplify this visual narrative, as an A&F model is located at its center, and whereby the viewer witnesses a subtle act of objectification bound by consent as the man dancing grinds against the woman. Are these two dirty dancing? What appears to be two characters equally engaged is rather equivocal—for only one character has an identity and is thus privileged for his distinction. The viewer reads his alabaster skin, Oxford shirt, jean pants, and sport coat, distinguishes and knows who the Abercrombie kid is, while the other figure, the woman, remains undetermined. This social hierarchy begins to resound the significance of property and provenance in structural inequities, but is this a depiction of claiming, as the viewer discerns the Abercrombie kid, biting his lip, and concentrating on the darker-toned woman in front of him? Looking through previous photos and the implicit dynamics of power within this image, expressions of social mobility, and edification (along with an exhibited privilege to pass) are all being incorporated within the Abercrombie & Fitch ideal. Nonetheless, the modern crusader and frontiersman have returned in the form of a cosmopolitan traveler. For the working-class consumer, cosmopolitanism is exemplary of upper-class privilege and power. Imitating and appropriating these characteristics is often seen as mode of access, regardless of lineage. Despite its contradiction, having an opportunity to buy mass-market goods that evoke privilege allows working-class consumers a fantastical alternative wherein their taste and claim of style is allowed to reject any connection to their economic disposition. Stuart Ewen states: [T]he emergence of a consumer society, filled with mass-produced status symbols, in which judgment about a person is not based on what one does within society, but rather upon what one has. Such an understanding of class has moved away from the conception rooted in the social relations of power, and toward a notion based, for the most part, on income and credit. Middle class status was becoming something founded purely on one’s ability to purchase, construct, and present a viable social self. While this modern idea of class invested more and more people with iconography of status, it also tended to mask the relations of power that prevailed within society.15 While on one hand upper-class characteristics stood as an opposite to working-class consumers, the association to lifestyle offered them a step away from the behavior of poverty through a new sense 176 figure 7: A&F Quarterly, Fall (2000) 177 of worth, expressed by cachet, cues, and social artifacts. Abercrombie & Fitch has banked on this effect. However, for the non-European subject or gender nonconforming subject donning the preppie identity, the extent of such a claim is limited by the engagement of the others to see them as such. What Stuart Hall describes as a psychic and imaginary engagement, made with an investment in the image or involvement in what the image is saying or doing.16 This is an abstract disposition for all persons making an identity or lifestyle claim; what is intended to be projected the intended projection is not necessarily what is read and identified. Transcendence from gender, class, racial, and ethnic conventions is not only provided under the pretense of self-producing, but also is dependent upon larger structures of individualism that obscure privileges based on cosmetic traits, such as skin, nose, hair, and lips. Each bound to such ideological associations as race and gender. This arrangement—wrought with anxiety and paradoxes—serves to bring about social identities signified by clothing yet misrecognized as the lineage of the donning subjects. Before industrial expansion in the midtwentieth-century working-class consumers were victims of a culture that maintained a marginalized exterior. It was a time when all persons knew their place in the world. This was made possible through cultural projects, such as eugenics, natural history, and public relations where the citizenry was cultivated to believe their economic disposition were characteristic of a higher order of nature. Concurrently, new strategies mediating public opinion became highly influential in other areas of business practice.17 This significantly altered clinical studies and practices of persuasion, and it was through this new vein that marketing research and advertising evolved into highly penetrating mechanisms by which identification and desire are authored. Advertising continues to play a role in the way consumers express themselves by way of social artifacts. By activating identification, image and display campaigns offer visual elements that can create meaning for the viewing subject. For Abercrombie & Fitch, a nostalgic style and vintage taste are themes used to connect consumers to a potential claim of distinction: being or aspiring to be a part of a particular social group that dresses a certain way and carries itself a particular way. In this case the value of the vintage look and casual luxury is indicative of a stamp of standardization or normality. For working-class consumers, gendered, raced, and ethnic minorities, fashion and style can facilitate an acceptance of difference as well as the opportunity to participate in social groups that designate meaning to the Abercrombie ideal. This ideal, marked as a style of dress and manner of being, offers itself as a social badge built off an informal cachet that allows consumers to project their membership to a lifestyle, association, or activities not weighted by class, gender, or race. José Esteban Muñoz in his theory of disidentification suggests that marginalized subjects can transfigure dominant ideologies into their own versions by “shuffling back and forth between reception and production.”18 He writes, “[it] is about expanding and problematizing identity and identification, not abandoning any socially prescribed identity component.”19 The Abercrombie 178 & Fitch ideal offers consumers the opportunity to look the part, while being not quite conventional. In my experience with the A&F brand I have often shifted from marginalized to conventional and back again. Perhaps in contrast to the Abercrombie & Fitch ideal its mass-produced vintage look denies any novelty of uniqueness or handcrafted distinction? According to Muñoz’s theory this superficial paradox would offer a marginalized subject room to embrace dominant cultural values as a strategy to subvert and expand meaning in an identity claim.20 While mimicry fares to be promising, it is not always successful given that meanings such as sex, gender, and race are understood socially as biological facts offering little room to transcend corporeal delineations. Nevertheless the ability to generate access to social groups by performing identifiable characteristics provides an ambivalent case for acceptance. Constantly shifting, oscillating, and confirming historical practices of distinction and differentiation, visual formations carry an evocative power that is constituted through the shared conventions of a social group. In other words, the transient nature of status suggests that meaning and its relation to identification is primarily a matter of engagement. 179 NOTES 1. In response to Latino, African American, Asian American and women employees and applicants who charged the company with discrimination, Abercrombie & Fitch’s defense team maintained a disavowal of any form of systematic discrimination, yet agreed to settle out of court, to end litigation. As a result a $40-million dollar settlement was made. In addition Abercrombie & Fitch agreed to a consent decree to implement over a six-year period. 2. Alex Wipperfurth, Brand Hijack: Marketing without Marketing, (New York: Penguin Group, 2005). 3. Kenneth W. Warren,“Appeals for (Mis)recognition: Theorizing the Diaspora,” Cultures of United States Imperialism, eds. Amy Kaplan and Donald E. Pease, (Durham: Duke University Press, 1993), 400. 4. Stuart Ewen, All Consuming Images: The Politics of Style in Contemporary Culture, Revised, (Basic Books, 1988), 49; Gordon J. Lippincott, Design For Business, (Chicago, 1947). 5. Ewen. 6. Anne McClintock, Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest, (London: Routlege, 1995), 4. 7. Abercrombie & Fitch ad in the New York Times August 6, 1918. 8. Ibid. 9. “Abercrombie & Fitch Company,” Contemporary Fashion, 2nd Edition, editor Taryn Benbow-Pfalzgraf, (Farmington Hills: St. James Press, 2002), 3. 10. Stuart Ewen, All Consuming Images: The Politics of Style in Contemporary Culture, Revised, (Basic Books, 1988), 68. 11. Paris, Ellen, “Endangered Species?” Forbes, no. 139, March 9, 1987, pp. 136–137. 12. “Abercrombie & Fitch Company,” Contemporary Fashion, 2nd Edition, editor Taryn Benbow-Pfalzgraf, (Farmington Hills: St. James Press, 2002), 4. 13. Willow Bay, “Profile of Leslie Wexner,” Pinnacle, Video transcript (Cable News Network, 2002): (accessed 20 July 2006). 14. Lisa Birnbach, The Preppy Handbook, (Workman Publishing Company, 1980), 48. 15. Stuart Ewen, All Consuming Images: The Politics of Style in Contemporary Culture, Revised, (Basic Books, 1988), 68. 16. Stuart Hall, Representation and Media, transcript, (Northampton: Media Education Foundation, 1997). 17. Ewen, xxxvi. 18. José Muñoz, Disidentifications: Queers of Color and the Performance of Politics, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999), 25. 19. Ibid., 29. 20. Ibid., 5.