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FSPC 4 (1) pp. 33–50 Intellect Limited 2017
Fashion, Style & Popular Culture
Volume 4 Number 1
© 2017 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/fspc.4.1.33_1
KEYWORDS
Fast Fashion
retailing
supply chain logistics
consumer behaviour
self-identity
youth culture
authenticity
AMANDA KOONTZ ANTHONY
University of Central Florida
IAN TAPLIN
Wake Forest University
Sustaining the retail
pilgrimage: Developments of
Fast Fashion and authentic
identities
ABSTRACT
This article critically reviews the interaction between production and consumption
in the apparel industry, focusing on changes that have occurred in the past decade.
Specifically, we examine connections between supply and demand for products in
a market noted for its volatility and product life cycles that can be measured in
weeks. Many studies have examined how supply chain rationalization has imposed
greater demands upon manufacturers to meet cost, quality, and delivery mandates.
However, fewer studies examine how changing consumer demand both affects and is
affected by the resulting retail revolution of Fast Fashion - a new breed of retailers
who stock new items more frequently, selling inexpensive ‘fashion forward’ items to
more style conscious consumers. We argue that retailers have realized that enhanced
designs provide transient consumer value and a more effective matching of supply
and demand. We theorize how consumers, meanwhile, behave strategically by visit-
ing stores more often and increasing the frequency of their purchases, which can
correspond with increasingly fluid and contextualized construction of pluralized
authentic identities.