Casual Hip-hop Fashion

From the late 1980s to the early 2000s, hip-hop culture spread rapidly in the United States and became an integral part of urban culture. The prevailing idea was to express the common issues of everyday life in words as they really are, as opposed to the idea of abstract and allegorical stage art. Along with the lyrics and messages of the songs, everyday and casual fashion styles were also dominant in the culture. The casual clothing such as baggy pants, baseball caps or beanies, workman's coveralls, and sports jerseys were a clear contrast to today's flashy hip-hop culture based on consumerist ideals.


Using a visual anthropological method, I analyzed 51 hip-hop music videos from the above-mentioned period and noted casual fashions. Whether it was a specific director's decision or an artist's own idea, from the collection below, we can see not only which brand dominated the casual clothing industry at the time, but also plenty of urban anthropological and urban ethnographic information such as how the artists expressed their hometowns, neighborhoods, and street names, religion, gender, and social class creatively.







Damnuurchin and Peking shops in Khüree

Хүрээний Бээжин дэлгүүрүүд







More to read:

POZDNEYEV, A.M. (2010). “URGA or DA KHÜREE”. David Sneath and Christopher Kaplonski (eds.). (2010). The history of Mongolia, Volume III. pp. 794–824. Global Oriental. Kent, United Kingdom, 
First published in A. M. Pozdneyev, Mongolia and the Mongols, Presenting the Results of a Trip Taken in 1892 and 1893. Excerpts from Chapter 2, ‘Urga or Da Khüree’, pp. 43–95, Indiana University, Bloomington, 1971 

Википедия - А. М. Позднеев