While the story of womens liberation has often been framed by the growing acceptance of pants over the twentieth century, the most important and influential female fashions of the era featured skirts. Suffragists and soldiers marched in skirts; the heroines of the Civil Rights Movement took a stand in skirts. Frida Kahlo and Georgia OKeeffe revolutionized modern art and Marie Curie won two Nobel Prizes in skirts. When NASA put a man on the moon, the computer wore a skirt, in the words of one of those 'computers', mathematician Katherine G. Johnson. As women made strides towards equality in the voting booth, the workforce, and the world at large, their wardrobes evolved with them. They did not need to 'wear the pants' to be powerful or progressive; the dress itself became modern as designers like Mariano Fortuny, Coco Chanel, Jean Patou, and Diane von Furstenberg redefined femininity for a new era. Skirts looks at the history of twentieth-century womenswear through the lens of game-changing styles like the Little Black Dress and the Bar Suit, as well as more obscure innovations like the Taxi dress or the Popover dress, which came with a matching potholder. These influential garments illuminate the times in which they were first worn and the women who wore them while continuing to shape contemporary fashion and even opening the door for a genderfluid future of skirts. At once an authoritative work of history and a delightfully entertaining romp through decades of fashion, Skirts charts the changing fortunes, freedoms, and aspirations of women themselves.
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Product Details
Weight: 362g
Dimensions: 146 x 217mm
Publication Date: 17 Oct 2022
Publisher: St Martin's Press
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781250275790
About Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell
Dr. Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell is an award-winning fashion historian curator and journalist. She has worked as a consultant and educator for museums and universities around the world. She is the author of Fashion Victims: Dress at the Court of Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette Worn on This Day: The Clothes That Made History The Way We Wed: A Global History of Wedding Fashion and Red White and Blue on the Runway. She frequently writes about fashion art and culture for scholarly journals and news outlets including The Wall Street Journal The Washington Post The Atlantic and Politico and has appeared on NPR the Biography Channel Reelz and numerous podcasts. She lives in Los Angeles.