一个偶然的痴迷:英国恋袜癖委员会内部

Andrew Groves
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文通过对英国袜子恋物癖委员会(BSFC)的案例研究,探讨了足球休闲服将袜子定位为一种文化上的越界服装。虽然大多数研究都将休闲人士置于流氓和暴力的话语中,但他们将着装作为协商共同男性身份的手段的研究仍然不足。BSFC成立于2011年,迅速发展到1000多名持证会员,在纽卡斯尔、曼彻斯特、伯明翰和伦敦举行会议,并在英国各地举行足球比赛。在BSFC内部,“恋物癖”一词并不是用来表示一个几乎完全是异性恋的群体的性偏好。相反,它承认了成员们对服装的痴迷,并强调了他们个人和集体实践中固有的潜台词张力。作者是BSFC的积极参与者,通过在线传播高度建构的自我生成图像,亲眼目睹了社区的发展,其中包括色彩缤纷的图案袜子和罕见的运动鞋。本文探讨了社交媒体的自我反射性使用,以构建群体实践,并提供了袜子如何有助于在这个社区内建立包容性和混合男性身份的共识的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A casual obsession: Inside the British Sock Fetish Council
This article interrogates the positioning of socks as a culturally transgressive garment by football casuals through a case study of the British Sock Fetish Council (BSFC). While most studies contextualize casuals within a discourse of hooliganism and violence, their use of dress as a means of negotiating shared masculine identities remains under-researched. Founded in 2011, the BSFC quickly grew to over 1000 card-carrying members, holding meets at Newcastle, Manchester, Birmingham and London, as well as at football matches throughout the United Kingdom. Within the BSFC, the term ‘fetish’ is not used to denote a sexual predilection by an almost entirely heterosexual community. Instead, it acknowledges the members’ obsession with clothing and highlights the sub-textual tensions inherent in their individual and collective practices. The author was an active participant within the BSFC, witnessing first-hand the community’s development through the online dissemination of highly constructed, self-generated imagery, featuring colourful, patterned socks juxtaposed with rare trainers. This article explores the self-reflexive use of social media to construct group practices and provides insights into how socks were instrumental in establishing consensus on inclusive and hybrid masculine identities within this community.
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