Skip to main content

Site navigation

  • University of Technology Sydney home
  • Home

    Home
  • For students

  • For industry

  • Research

Explore

  • Courses
  • Events
  • News
  • Stories
  • People

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Study at UTS

    • arrow_right_alt Find a course
    • arrow_right_alt Course areas
    • arrow_right_alt Undergraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Postgraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Research Masters and PhD
    • arrow_right_alt Online study and short courses
  • Student information

    • arrow_right_alt Current students
    • arrow_right_alt New UTS students
    • arrow_right_alt Graduates (Alumni)
    • arrow_right_alt High school students
    • arrow_right_alt Indigenous students
    • arrow_right_alt International students
  • Admissions

    • arrow_right_alt How to apply
    • arrow_right_alt Entry pathways
    • arrow_right_alt Eligibility
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for students

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Apply for a coursearrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Scholarshipsarrow_right_alt
  • Featured industries

    • arrow_right_alt Agriculture and food
    • arrow_right_alt Defence and space
    • arrow_right_alt Energy and transport
    • arrow_right_alt Government and policy
    • arrow_right_alt Health and medical
    • arrow_right_alt Corporate training
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Tech Central
    • arrow_right_alt Case studies
    • arrow_right_alt Research
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for industry

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Partner with usarrow_right_alt
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Explore our research
    • arrow_right_alt Research centres and institutes
    • arrow_right_alt Graduate research
    • arrow_right_alt Research partnerships
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for research

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Research centres and institutesarrow_right_alt
  • University of Technology Sydney home
Explore the University of Technology Sydney
Category Filters:
University of Technology Sydney home University of Technology Sydney home
  1. home
  2. arrow_forward_ios ... About UTS
  3. arrow_forward_ios ... Information on Faculties...
  4. arrow_forward_ios Faculty of Design, Archi...
  5. arrow_forward_ios Kleider machen Leute: Jewish Men and Dress Politics in Vienna, 1890–1938

Kleider machen Leute: Jewish Men and Dress Politics in Vienna, 1890–1938

DAB Design, staff project Kleider machen Leute
1/1

Kleider machen Leute: Jewish Men and Dress Politics in Vienna, 1890–1938

Jonathan Kaplan

All men wear clothes but what do everyday clothes mean? Do they reveal or conceal and what messages do they contain? This project looked at the relationship of Jewish men and their clothing in Vienna from 1890 until the Nazi occupation of Austria in March 1938.

The adoption of modern clothing—particularly the suit we largely recognise today—corresponded to the broad period of Jewish freedoms in Western and Central Europe. These new freedoms included the right to work in occupations previously barred to Jews and settle anywhere within Austria-Hungary. By donning these garments of urban bourgeois respectability, Jewish men expressed their desire and intention to participate openly in modern European society. Yet these Jewish subjects on one level could not win. By wearing fashionable European dress they were sometimes accused in turn of luxurious and cosmopolitan behaviour, resulting in new antisemitic stereotypes.

I work across surviving photographs and illustrations, written sources including literary fiction, contemporary print media, memoirs and oral history with survivors themselves. The project makes an important contribution to the field of fashion history and addresses the little-explored topic of how men make consumer decisions. It argues that, far from serving exclusively as a sign of the desire to assimilate, Viennese Jewish men engaged with fashion for multiple reasons,  including joining in, blending, engaging with business, academic and literary communities, and refusing the stereotype of the old-fashioned, pre-modern ‘Jew’. Some wore socks and sandals, some wore eccentric colours and cravats, some waxed their moustaches and donned special wardrobes to trek in the countryside. The research uncovered a new, complex picture of how an often-marginalised community adapts to social and political change. But in the end, the suit was not enough to protect Jewish men in Vienna, thousands of whom were exiled or murdered by the Nazis.

The work featured at the Sherman Centre for Culture and Ideas Fashion Hub on 7 April 2019.

Kaplan, J.C. 2018, 'Looking and behaving: Sartorial politics and Jewish men in fin-de-siècle Vienna,' Critical Studies in Men's Fashion, vol. 5, no. 1+2, pp. 5–23.

  • Related: How anti-Semitic stereotypes from a century ago echo today
  • Attend “Made in Vienna: A Fashionable Society before the Anschluss” at Limmud 2019.
School of Design
Acknowledgements

Jonathan Kaplan presenting at the Sherman Centre for Culture and Ideas Fashion Hub, 2019. Photograph by Daniel Asher Smith. 

Share
Share this on Facebook Share this on Twitter Share this on LinkedIn
DAB Design, staff project Fashion to Costume

Fashion to Costume: Costume to Fashion

Peter McNeil

DAB Design, staff project Imagining Fashion Futures Lab

Imagining Fashion Futures Lab

Design staff project, Fashion Studies International Workshop

Fashion Studies: An International Perspective

Peter McNeil

Drawn Threads book, showcasing a DAB staff project, Lace Narrative Monograph

Lace Narratives Monograph

Cecilia Heffer

DAB staff collection, Data Lace

Data Lace

Cecilia Heffer

Process map for a farm

Scoping the future algae-based bioplastics industry in regional Australia

Sam Wearne, Thomas Lee, Alexandra Crosby, Rachael Wakefield-Rann

Acknowledgement of Country

UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

University of Technology Sydney

City Campus

15 Broadway, Ultimo, NSW 2007

Get in touch with UTS

Follow us

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook

A member of

  • Australian Technology Network
Use arrow keys to navigate within each column of links. Press Tab to move between columns.

Study

  • Find a course
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • How to apply
  • Scholarships and prizes
  • International students
  • Campus maps
  • Accommodation

Engage

  • Find an expert
  • Industry
  • News
  • Events
  • Experience UTS
  • Research
  • Stories
  • Alumni

About

  • Who we are
  • Faculties
  • Learning and teaching
  • Sustainability
  • Initiatives
  • Equity, diversity and inclusion
  • Campus and locations
  • Awards and rankings
  • UTS governance

Staff and students

  • Current students
  • Help and support
  • Library
  • Policies
  • StaffConnect
  • Working at UTS
  • UTS Handbook
  • Contact us
  • Copyright © 2025
  • ABN: 77 257 686 961
  • CRICOS provider number: 00099F
  • TEQSA provider number: PRV12060
  • TEQSA category: Australian University
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility