by starfox64 » Mon Oct 14, 2013 11:05 am
a few quick thoughts on that.
1. fashion is more visible, for lack of a better word. if you spend have a comic book collection that's worth thousands of dollars, people need to come look at it (probably at your house). cars are more visible, but not in the same way. if you have really expensive clothes, it's more obviously notable (though less so to people not tuned in to fashion) to people you encounter in everyday situations (coworkers, friends, etc.).
2. things like cars and sports equipment and computer parts typically have quantifiable advantages the higher up you go on the ladder. so even if none of us can really tell the difference between different processors, the benchmark testing done by computer gaming gurus provide hard numbers to back up their assertions that they need to have the best of the best. for whatever reason this gains more traction with people than making equivalent statements with regard to clothes.
3. with a lot of things like comic books, there is some level of investment hype. during the early 90s there was a huge comic book bubble that saw all kinds of variant covers and new books released (x-men #1 was a huge one), mostly driven by speculators. it ended up almost destroying the comic book industry in the mid- to late-90s, but i think that there is still a tinge of people thinking that these things that they are enjoying now will, at some point down the road, become more valuable. action comics #1 (the first appearance of superman) regularly sells for millions of dollars. of course, people don't really take into consideration that it was printed 80 years ago. obviously, this is not applicable to everything, but for a lot of hobbies i do think that there is this sense of permanence, that if you have a good collection of comics or a restored classic car, it will appreciate in value. this is totally contrasted with the public perception of fashion, which is that people who are interested in it are always chasing the latest trend.
and then there is sexism and homophobia, which i don't think can be divorced from public perceptions of fashion at all.
"Authorities say the phony Pope can be recognized by his high-top sneakers and incredibly foul mouth."