Thanks for the links! Interesting, though I disagree with most of her points. I think her view of a "good" fashion photograph is very restrictive.
This one, for example :
"Fashion photography isn’t obligated to take readers into an elegant fantasyland, though that certainly was nice. But it should be different from photojournalism, and especially photojournalism concentrating on society’s dark side. "
People in poor neighborhoods often have a great sense of fashion, so why not show *their* world? Of course there's a risk that you may be using their creativity just to get some, um, street credibility. But that depends on the photographer's own ethics & talent. (BTW, to say that photojournalism concentrates on "society's dark side" isn't exactly true either).
And then she shows that photo of Maggie Rizer (I think it was shot by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, but I'm not sure. Anyway, I've seen a big print of it in an exhibition, and it's gorgeous), saying that the model looks "stupid". Well that's a subjective opinion so I'm not even gonna try & argue with it. But I think she's missing the point. Models in the 50's always looked confident and cool. That's different today, and models are often shown in situations that they don't control (looking perplexed, angry, whatever). IMO, that doesn't make them more "stupid" than the people shown in 50's photos. The photographers simply catch them in moments where they're "in action", and not in "calm" moments. To me, that's a very positive change.
This being said, I agree that there's a lot of rubbish in today's fashion photography. But I think it's a matter of the photographer's talent & mood, not a matter of aestethic codes that have changed.
(sorry for my poor english, by the way

)