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cybergoth girl
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Cybergoth Girl

While the term 'Cybergoth' was coined in 1988 in the United Kingdom, by Games Workshop, for their roleplaying game Dark Future, the fashion style did not emerge until a decade later. Valerie Steele quotes Julia Borden, who defines cybergoth as combining elements industrial aesthetics with a style associated with "Gravers" (Gothic ravers). Gravers hybridized "the British Raver look and the NYC ClubKid look with a 'freak show' spin." This fusion between New York and London styles began in 1999. Borden indicates that initially the hair extensions and bright fishnets did not mesh well with goth fashion, but that by 2002 "the rave elements dress were replaced by Industrial-influenced accessories, such as goggles, reflective clothing, and mostly black clothing." Steele summarizes:
“Today cyber goths tend to wear primarily black clothing with hints neon colors, as well as clothing made reflective materials and PVC, and huge platform boots. Their hair extensions or falls ten incorporate a bright color and multiple piercings are typical. Goggles are ten worn. Some cyber goths also wear gas masks or (in what appears to be a kind medical fetish) shiny PVC doctors' masks.”
Nancy Kilpatrick indicates that David Bowie's look in the 1970s is the initial inspiration for the style, and that Fritz Lang's Metropolis provided the prototype for cyber aesthetics. Kilpatrick also notes a link to cyberpunk science fiction, particularly William Gibson's Neuromancer.

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Album name:People & Humanity
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Keywords:#cybergoth #girl
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Date added:Oct 11, 2010
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