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How Capsule Wardrobe Discourse on Social Media Feminizes Minimalism and Aestheticizes Self-Restraint

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  • Min Zhang

    (Massey University, New Zealand)

Abstract

This paper critically examines the cultural phenomenon of capsule wardrobe discourse on social media, arguing that it feminizes minimalist aesthetics and aestheticizes self-restraint within a neoliberal framework. Drawing from feminist media theory, Foucault’s concept of governmentality, and critiques of digital consumer culture, the essay explores how capsule wardrobes serve not only as a fashion strategy but also as a symbolic system of aesthetic, emotional, and ethical labor. The analysis reveals how self-restraint is rebranded as empowerment, how unpaid curatorial labor is romanticized as feminine virtue, and how digital platforms reward visual coherence as a proxy for moral character. Capsule wardrobe influencers are shown to embody the ideal neoliberal subject—self-regulating, optimized, and perpetually productive—while simultaneously erasing the classed, racialized, and gendered dimensions of this aesthetic labor. The paper argues that the seemingly apolitical act of reducing one’s wardrobe functions as a performative ethic of aestheticized austerity, entrenching broader ideologies of digital femininity, self-branding, and consumer virtue under the veil of simplicity and style.

Suggested Citation

  • Min Zhang, 2025. "How Capsule Wardrobe Discourse on Social Media Feminizes Minimalism and Aestheticizes Self-Restraint," Art and Society, Paradigm Academic Press, vol. 4(6), pages 1-10, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:bdz:arasoc:v:4:y:2025:i:6:p:1-10
    DOI: 10.63593/AS.2709-9830.2025.07.001
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