269
Clothing Cultures
Volume 1 Number 3
© 2014 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/cc.1.3.269_1
Keywords
representation
fashion branding
masculinity
consumption
consumer
advertising
Joseph h. hancocK II
Drexel University
VIcKI KaramInas
Massey University
The Joy of pecs:
representations of
masculinities in fashion
brand advertising
absTracT
The commercial representation of men’s bodies is part of a longer history that has
been particularly intensive in the post-war years and especially in the last two
decades. Popular brands Jockey, Bonds, Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, Abercrombie
& Fitch, BVD (Bradley, Voorhees and Day) Munsingwear and Aussie Bum have
internationally dominated fashion media over the last century with campaigns that
have incorporated cultural ideals of men’s lifestyles using unclothed images and
infusing them with branding messages, in effect communicating to male consum-
ers expectations of how they should look. Through the context of market position,
fashion promotion and using various visual techniques, the male body has become a
product that has been marketed and objectified, and a hyperrealized image of global
cultural proportions. This article reflects the cultural approach of the market position
and brand management by tracing the representation of the male body in fashion
brand promotions, fashion spreads and advertisements. By analysing the male body
as a discursive effect created at the intersection of consumption, advertising and