Wearable Utopias: Imagining, Inventing, and Inhabiting New Worlds

Wearable Utopias: Imagining, Inventing, and Inhabiting New Worlds

Wearable Utopias: Imagining, Inventing, and Inhabiting New Worlds

Wearable Utopias: Imagining, Inventing, and Inhabiting New Worlds

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Overview

A collection of thought-provoking interviews with cutting-edge designers who transform ordinary wearables into extraordinary sites of personal expression, public engagement, and radical political action.

Wearable Utopias explores the promise of wearables for reimagining social and political problems of today for diverse and inclusive worlds for tomorrow. Kat Jungnickel, Ellen Fowles, Katja May, and Nikki Pugh entangle science and technology studies, gender studies, and cultural studies with contemporary issues to highlight the role wearables can play in forging alternative paths through conventional landscapes. Featuring twenty-three interviews with new and established international designers, this collection covers everything from coats designed to protect digital privacy to high-performing jeans that combat air pollution and to hi-vis cyclewear as a response to urban harassment.

The interviews in Wearable Utopias are organized into six key themes addressing a selection of pressing civic issues: expanding (wearables that push physical, social, and political boundaries), moving (wearables that enable participation in a wider range of sport and activities), concealing (wearables that defend privacy or keep secrets), connecting (wearables that link individuals to large-scale issues); leaking (wearables that challenge the idea that urinating and menstruating are problematic or taboo), and working (wearables that address inequalities in the workplace).

Wearable Utopias offers insight and inspiration for students, researchers, designers, and anyone making things to wear who is frustrated with daily inequities and normative limitations and wants to do things differently.

This book is part of the European Research Council–funded project Politics of Patents (POP): Reimagining Citizenship via Clothing Inventions, hosted at Goldsmiths, University of London, led by Kat Jungnickel with Ellen Fowles (Research Assistant), Katja May (Postdoctoral Fellow), and Nikki Pugh (Research Assistant).

Wearable Utopias offers insight and inspiration for students, researchers, designers, and anyone making things to wear who is frustrated with daily inequities and normative limitations and wants to do things differently.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262548250
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 09/24/2024
Pages: 258
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

This book is part of the European Research Council–funded project Politics of Patents (POP): Reimagining Citizenship via Clothing Inventions, hosted at Goldsmiths, University of London, led by Kat Jungnickel with Ellen Fowles (Research Assistant), Katja May (Postdoctoral Fellow), and Nikki Pugh (Research Assistant).

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A fascinating and innovative book, Wearable Utopias demonstrates the radical purpose behind what we wear and the visionary possibilities of the dressed body.” 
—Shahidha Bari, Professor, London College of Fashion; author of Dressed: The Philosophy of Clothes

“An invitation into a vast and exciting world in which the smallest details—fabrics, colors, threads, and patterns—have the potential to instigate the most radical social and political change.” 
—Laura Forlano, Professor, College of Arts, Media, and Design, Northeastern University; author of Cyborg and editor of Bauhaus Futures


Wearable Utopias is a revolutionary manifesto that will reshape why and how we design for bodies. This must-read for every fashion and product design student will help to ensure each piece you create will cultivate more survivable, thrivable, and liberatory worlds.”
—Ben Barry, Dean of Fashion, Parsons School of Design, New York

Wearable Utopias demonstrates how wearables can be world-making. Reading about these creative visionaries help us imagine pathways to kinder, more just futures and reflect the rich diversity of humanity.”
—Timo Rissanen, Associate Professor, Fashion & Textiles, University of Technology Sydney

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