Research question?

For Research Methods unit, I decided to continue on my study proposal: to create a space for individuals, Indonesian youth to be exact, to do self-expression.

Self-expression and representation is an important discourse in my country right now, particularly for the younger generation. As a conservative country with a Moslem majority, people are not very welcome to the new wave of youth; individuals who express themselves differently–whether through clothes, body image, sexuality, etc.

I followed the study proposal at first, looking at what makes a ‘fashion capital city’ from the book Fashion Cultures Revisited.

Notes I got from Fashion Culture Revisited. There are some factors that make a city titled ‘fashion capital’. The first one is a geographical part, most of the capital cities belong into 85 – 52 degrees latitude, which means they have four seasons and are relatively cold countries. If compared to my country, this seasonal rhythm is something impossible since Indonesia is a tropical country and only has two seasons. As for specialist workshop or individual craft workers, clustering of designers, entrepreneurs, and garment trade workers, Indonesia has it. But I need to make sure if there’s a standard to decide whether Indonesia really has it. But in the end, I think comparing the capital cities to Indonesia left me with a huge gap and the problem lies within it may vary and too much for me to research.
Mind map and scribbles of my thoughts

In the Fashion Cultures Revisited, there’s a paragraph that talked about how the fashion on the street moves to the catwalk. The liveliness of street style affected the style on the runway. That is also one thing that Indonesian doesn’t have: the street in street style. Besides the hot weather, we barely have any pavement to walk on. You can see sidewalk on a big street or business area. But it’s nonexistent on the others. We have a lot of backstreets as well, sometimes only the size of a motorcycle or a person. Pedestrian often walk with motorcycles or bump to street vendors. Our fashion is happening inside the building; malls, cafes, events, or the most pivotal one: the internet. I had worked as a writer on a teen fashion magazine in Jakarta before and I had to fill the street style column by looking for teens with ‘style’, and I found all of them inside malls and fashion event–never on the street. This argument also supported by an essay by Brent Luvaas called “Shooting Street Style in Indonesia: A Photo Essay”. Luvaas found it difficult to photograph ‘street style’ cause it’s hard to discover ‘cool’ people on the street. Thus the definition of ‘street style’ in Indonesia became blurry too.

Another thing I noticed as a hurdle is how hard it is to get academic research on fashion–specifically on the topic sociology on fashion. I tried the e-source from UAL but mostly saw about modest fashion, e-commerce, and business side of fashion in Indonesia. So I only have a few resources that I can rely on.

I tried asking my friends through an Instagram story on the topic. Around 10+ people replied and I was surprised how open and frustrated people are about self-expression in Indonesia. I discovered some similar patterns from their stories. Most of them are uncomfortable with people staring at them because they feel like they’re being judged for something wrong. Especially for the women, they feel unpleasant when they walk on the street or ride public transportation because they got catcalled or harassed. Their closest environment (family, friends, colleagues) also put pressure on them, trying to ‘correct’ their appearance to make them look the same as everybody else. This is why I feel the power of the gaze and social conformity are two of the biggest issue that affected how people present themselves on the outside.

The internet exposed Indonesian youth to different styles or forms of self-expression yet they’re niche compare to the vast population. Individuals who dare to challenge the mainstream current is called nonconformist. I decided that the keyword for my research is ‘millennials and gen z nonconformist self-expression through fashion in Jakarta’. But nonconformist here still have a broad definition, that is why I try to narrow it down by demographic: half millennials and gen Z who live in Jakarta. The conformist should be defined too because depending on the social group or geography, they can change. I can narrow it down by industry (one of my respondents is a rapper and he usually performs in office working attire–shirt and structured trouser–while most people in the community wear oversized, baggy clothes), religion (especially for women who chose to not wear hijab), or social. I still can’t decide which to focus on. I am interested to look at the issue on Moslem conform since it’s the most apparent (you have to cover yourself, can not have tattoo(s), prohibited to change your body parts, etc) but it will be very liberal and I need a lot of strong backups regarding the topic as it’s a sensitive one.

The feedback I got from presenting my initial idea on the research questions. From there I tried to explore more and create some research questions. A lot of thoughts on the nonconformist and conformist; for the conformist–is there any difference between those who live/have lived abroad and those who live in Indonesia? For those who conform, whether it’s family, friends, or colleagues, is there any difference between those who conform but okay with people not conforming and those who conform but not okay with people not conforming?

I still have a long way to go to discover my specific research topic but I feel like I’m getting there.

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