Imitation | Distinction |
Heredity | Individual Variation |
Universality | Particularity |
Submission | Sense of Power |
Duration | Mutability |
Femininity | Masculinity |
Stillness | Movement |
Receptivity | Productivity |
Creation | Destruction |
Darwinian Selection | Darwinian Mutation |
Extensity | Intensity |
Event | Repetition |
Accident | Meaning |
"As fashion spreads, it gradually goes to its doom. The distinctiveness which in the early stages of a set fashion assures for it a certain distribution is destroyed as the fashion spreads, and as this element wanes, the fashion also is bound to die. (...) The attractions of both poles of the phenomena meet in fashion, and show also here that they belong together unconditionally, although, or rather because, they are contradictory in their very nature." (F, pp. 138-139.)
"The fact that the demi-monde is so frequently a pioneer in matters of fashion, is due to its peculiarly uprooted form of life. The pariah existence to which society condemns the demi-monde, produces an open or latent hatred against everything that has the sanction of law, of every permanent institution ... In this continual striving for new, previously unheard-of fashions, in the regardlessness with which the one that is most diametrically opposed to the existing one is passionately adopted, there lurks an aesthetic expression of the desire for destruction, which seems to be an element peculiar to all that lead this pariah-like existence, so long as they are not completely enslaved within." (F, p. 145.)
"Because of their external origin, these imported fashions create a special and significant form of socialization, which arises through mutual relation to a point without the circle. It sometimes appears as though social elements, just like the axes of vision, converge best at a point that is not too near." (F, p. 136.)
2 These drives must be "natural" and cannot be sociologically produced because they are asserted to be the cause, and not the effect, of social phenomena.
3 Veblen was the first to remark, in 1899 (The Theory of the Leisure Class, Modern Library, Random House, New York 1934), that, in a market, what and whether one buys is determined partially by what and whether many others have also bought. In short, demand by the consumer is bound partially to interpersonal effects. On this point, see also: James Duesenberry, Income, Savings and the Theory of Consumer Behavior, Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, 1949; Harvey Leibenstein, "Bandwagon, Snob and Veblen Effects in the Theory of Consumer Demand", Quarterly Journal of Economics, 64, 1950, pp. 183-207 and Harvey Leibenstein, Beyond Economic Man: A New Foundation for Microeconomics, Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, 1976; Mark Granovetter and Roland Soong, "Threshold Models of Interpersonal Effects in Consumer Demand", Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 7, 1986, pp. 83-99.
4 For the case of Italy, see: C. Tullio Altan, I Valori Difficili, Bompiani, Milano, 1974; L. Ricolfi and L. Sciolla, Senza Padri n&ecaute; Maestri, De Donato, Bari, 1980; L. Ricolfi and L. Sciolla, "Fermare il Tempo" in Inchiesta, 54, 1981, pp. 34-43; S. Messina, "I partiti, la Famiglia, il Lavoro: Ecco che Cosa ne Pensano i Giovani", La Repubblica, 17 giugno 1983, p. 6.