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Dressed for Freedom

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Member Reviews

There's a lot of interesting stuff here, although I must admit that I found the writing repetitive and the chapters longer than they needed to be as a result. It slowed the pace and kept pulling me out of the narrative moments, which was frustrating when the reason for the pulling out felt like unnecessary repetition... Still there is a lot of interesting stuff here, and while I find it frustrating that we continue to fight many of these battles, albeit on slightly different fronts, definitely appreciate the author's efforts to highlight these issues and how they have existed - and been addressed -throughout the past century-plus...

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Fashions have changed significantly over my life.

When I was a child growing up, I wore a dress with white gloves and a hat to wear to church.

In junior high, girls were made to kneel and if their skirts didn’t touch the ground they were sent home to change their clothes. Twiggy and Mod style and Sassoon hair cuts were big when I was a freshman in high school. Spring semester of my senior year of high school, we could wear pants—not jeans–on Fridays.

At college, girls wore jeans and long hair parted in the middle. My first full-time job women wore micro-mini skirts. At my tenth class reunion, several of us sported frizzy perms, a kind of Afro for white women. Dress for Success came along and for my first job in sales, I wore a Brooks Brothers navy suit with an oxford cloth button down shirt and ribbon tie, and high heels, and I carried a leather brief case but no purse.

I remember midi skirts, and maxi skirts, platform shoes and cowboy boots and transparent shirts and designer clothes and track suits–and now it seems everyone wears hoodies and sweat pants and expensive running shoes.

Whew. I have seen a lot of changes. Then, I think of my grandmothers who were born in the early 1900s and the changes they saw in her lifetime.

I had not considered the relationship between fashion and feminism. Weren’t Flappers just party girls? The Gibson Girl a mere fashion icon? I knew that Bloomers, the ugly harem pants under short skirts, were designed to allow women mobility. I remember Burn the Bra feminists. But fashion has a closer relationship to feminism than I had considered.

Dressed for Freedom debunks the myth that women’s freedom and fashion were incompatible, showing how icons from the Gibson Girl to Hollywood stars were intertwined with feminism. Considering class and race, working women in the city and activists who appeared on magazine covers, the author traces the transformation of fashion between 1890 and 1980.

Although only 272 pages, there is a lot of information packed into these chapters.

Beginning with the Gibson Girl, the white, middle class, active woman who wore shirtwaists and bicycle skirts, the author shows how dress reflected a ‘new woman’ who was active and attractive. The look was copied by woman of all classes, races, and adopted by suffragists. This correlation of fashions allowing women more freedom and the look being adopted by feminists, the author shows, continued. Feminists endeavored to counter accusations of being masculine by adopting feminine styles. Suffragettes adopted tailored suits with plenty of useful pockets. The more radical women took up Oriental-inspired loose, flowing dresses.

The 1920s saw society women and working women adopt the dropped waist, short skirts, and bobbed hair of the Flapper era. The thin fabrics, short skirt and open sleeves and neckline allowed freedom of movement. The boyish silhouette, focusing on legs instead of the bust, was the beginning of worshipping the youth culture. The simple construction boosted the home sewing pattern industry. And, no restricting corsets were needed.

Hurrah for shorter skirts–they give more freedom of movement–Hurrah for less clothes–they give more health. You don’t find many twentieth century girls fading away or swooning as it seemed the style to do in the 1880’s and 90’s. Now, they play golf, tennis, basketball, they go out for track teams, swimming and numerous other beneficial exercises that have improved the health of the female sex.

Dorothy Ilone Embry, Harlem Sub-Debs Association, 1927 as quoted in Dressed for Freedom
The look also impacted in negative ways, the look requiring dieting, chest binding, and frequent trips to the hair salon.

Many saw the Flapper style as reflecting a loosening of morality, while others recognized its connection to the growing freedom allowed women. I know my paternal grandmother worked in a factory in the 1920s and she is photographed in the simple dresses of this era. Whereas my maternal great-grandmother also worked in a factory while wearing long skirts, long sleeves, and the restrictive undergarments of 1900.

About the time I was born, the New Look returned to fashions that were beautiful but more cumbersome. Tight waists, full skirts ballooned with multiple petticoats, the torpedo bra, fancy hats and gloves. Sportswear then dominated. Shirtwaists, American designers, clothes for the working woman, Hollywood stars wearing pants, boxy coats with pockets. These were the fashions I dressed my Barbie doll in and that my mom wore when I was a girl and that I thought I would be wearing when I grew up.

Instead, as a teenager in the 1960s women’s lib and hippie fashion and short skirts and blue jeans and t-shirts took over. Fashion was all about looking like young teenagers again. I was weird to see my grandmother in a skirt above her knees at my wedding. Fashion followed the more radical element in society, evolving into Unisex and older people complaining they couldn’t tell the boys from the girls anymore. Makeup and hair was more natural. Mom had tortured me with perms as a child, but now I could wear long, straight hair.

In the early 70s, I was sporting an ERA pinback button at the same time female coworkers in the office wore micro-miniskirts that showed all when they bent over and men wore long hair and bell bottoms. The overt feminism of the time combined the struggle for economic equality and equality in the work place with women embracing their sexuality.

The book’s illustrations bring the descriptions to life. They show how suffragettes and feminists embraced style and beauty to prove that women can be equal and not ‘mannish.’

The book is enjoyable as well as informative. It was also an interesting way to consider fashion over my own lifetime as reflective of women’s gains in independence, equality, and power.

I received a free egalley from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.

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What an interesting book! It's fascinating to see how fashion has been influenced by history - and vice versa - through the years. The book is a unique look at a subject that is often overlooked.

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Fashion can allow women to express themselves and their modern gender identities and promote feminist ideas. This book outlines how women used fashion - from shirtwaists of the 1890s to the miniskirts and unisex outfits of the 1970s - as a tool for self-expression and feminism.
I appreciate the book's premise and the extensive research the author did. However, women still fight today with the same concepts - using clothing as a form of self-expression, fighting prejudice and sexism based on what we choose to wear, and facing judgment for our fashion selections. I'd love to see long-term changes happen in this area.
While I appreciated the content, the author repeats herself in places. The notes at the end are helpful, though.

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This book caught my eye on Netgalley, thanks to them for giving me access to a pre-release copy. Because I'm interested in textiles and textile crafts I thought I'd give it a try. I wasn't sure there was going to be much "there" there. Fashion?? But I was wrong.

While sometimes I feel Rabinovitch-Fox overworks her material a little, and it seemed there was a little repetitiveness, overall this was almost all new information for me. Having come along in the middle of the *second wave* of feminism, I just remember a general *jeans good, fashion bad* attitude. This book goes back to the turn of the 20th century to discuss the rise of the skirt and shirtwaist look of the Gibson girl as a challenge to the Victorian look of huge heavy dresses and artificial corseted waistlines. This is a look you will instantly recognize if you happen to have seen photos of turn of the century college women. She then steps through the major periods in American female fashion, highlighting how more than once the fashion industry tried to revert women to heavy and confining clothes (if everyone has to buy new clothes, they make more money) only to be thwarted by women unwilling to give up the comfort of their clothing.

She includes a lot of information about how black women responded to and interacted with fashion trends, in a context different from that of middle class or working white women. Images of black women in the African American press are combined with discussions of how black women made their choices in a context of racial uplift and negative stereotypes of black women, such that they embraced the same styles but gave them different meaning. She also writes of black fashion designers I was never aware existed.

I feel like there is a distinction between *fashion" and "clothes* but perhaps that is a more modern way of thinking. There is a lot here for anyone interested in how *clothes made the woman* and/or feminist in 20th century America.

I do wish the cover photo was better. The mention of rules for bathing suit length is very brief in comparison to the amount of information about almost everything else covered. I recommend a different photo. Almost any other photo contained in the book, or a collage of several, would be better.

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Dressed for Freedom: The Fashionable Politics of American Feminism is a book I have always wanted to read, and I’m glad Einav Rabinovitch-Fox has written it. It is a fast-paced but extensive account of the (sometimes trial and error) relationship between the evolution of women’s fashion and progress toward equality for women. Covering 1890 to 1980, it begins with bloomers and the Gibson Girl and does a good job of integrating matters of economic and social class (including working women), race, and sexual orientation. From the role of the bicycle, the shirtwaist, and mass production; to the suffrage suit, workhouse dress, and “marching suit” that smuggled in pants; to the politics of pockets; to an effective rebellion by women consumers across age, class, and race lines against the fashion industry’s attempt to lengthen hemlines in 1970; to the “success suit and yes, the pantsuit!, the book successfully draws on women’s apparel as primary source material for understanding women’s history. There is good information on the role of specific women designers and executives in the fashion industry (manufacturing, cosmetics, retail, advertising, and media), including Dorothy Shaver, president of Lord & Taylor, who promoted women designers and “American Fashions for American Women.” Political figures including Eleanor Roosevelt, Mary McLeod Bethune, and Betty Friedan and Bella Abzug also make an appearance in discussions of garment workers and unions, promotion of Black designers, and fashion and second wave feminism, respectively. The influence of the film industry and prominent actresses and costume designers on mainstream trends is also discussed.

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<p>Review copy provided by the publisher.</p>
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<p>What a <em>weird</em> book.</p>
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<p>There are places where it does an excellent job of focusing on mainstream fashion, where a lot of what I've read about feminism and fashion has been focused on radicalism. And that's really useful--the places where the average woman's attitudes about each topic interrelate can be interesting and illuminating. Rabinovitch-Fox is fairly good at looking how white middle-class examples percolate into respectability for working-class and/or Black women, too.</p>
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<p>However, one of the major limitations of this approach is that it ends up giving the rather strong impression that fashion flows from White women to Black women--because the pattern of "and then Black women picked up this middle-class White trend to gain respectability" does of course only flow one way, but that is not the only thing that happens in fashion, not in general and not in its relationship to feminism. It's just the focus of this book that makes it look that way.</p>
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<p>Further, as often happens with American history writing, the ideas of race are basically limited to Black/White...even when the fashion in question is "kimono"/"Oriental"-style. Rabinovitch-Fox has a chance to discuss what actual Japanese-American women thought of the Western fashion trends that claimed to derive from their own heritage but actually had only a loose relationship to those garments, how those women's access to those trends differed from White women's, but that was an opportunity lost here. As were several others--rural women. Cleaners. The generalizations Rabinovitch-Fox falls back on here hold in many cases but sometimes obscure more than they illuminate. If you want to know what middle-class women are buying off the rack as relates to mainstream feminism, this isn't particularly deep, but it makes a start.</p>
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I really wanted to like this book, but I just never felt like I could truly get into it. The topic is incredibly interesting, but I found myself getting easily distracted or my mind wandering every time I picked it up. I did finish it and I'm glad I did, but I'm not sure I'd recommend this with gusto.

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An informative and enjoyable read! Rabinovitch-Fox's assessment of a century of women's clothing choices put a lot of things that I already knew into perspective. Interesting, the transformational nature of the Gibson Girl look and shirtwaists had on allowing women the freedom of movement while still maintaining the dignity of looking like a lady. The discussion on hem lengths was fascinating, and to think of how restricted women's lives were in inclement weather when their dresses dragged on the ground. Loved reading about the background of the white suit and also how clothing heralded and adopted for comfort and mass production while maintaining dignity became a mechanism for Black women to advance. This book is a keeper. It will generate much discussion and I know that I'll go back to it time and again.
#netgalley

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Fashion is always been related to politics and social status. This is a well researched and interesting visual history of how it evolved between the end of XIX and XX century.
It's an interesting read.
Recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine

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Dressed for Freedom is an outstanding book about how clothing and fashion promoted feminism since the 1880s. Einav Rabinovitch-Fox is such an amazing writer and researcher that has obvious passion for the topic. The book is dense with information and facts about the history of fashion and feminism with a positive, empowered perspective. IFor example, the book covered Dorothy Shaver - head of Lord & Taylor who promoted American women designers like Claire McCardell during the 30s, rather than European male designers. Rabinovitch-Fox presents an uplifting history of women using fashion as a positive way to promote feminism. The auther also discusses the present and looks to the future (briefly). I have read through this book once and have pre-ordered the hard cover so I can read again and make notes. The book is inspring and engaging in the best way!

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Very well written Einav Rabinovitch-Fox!
I was totally entertained by the history, dialogue and photographs throughout.
Definitely recommend

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I received a free copy from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

I have always been interested in fashion. In the politics, the propaganda, the function and the differing forms and uses. However, I have rarely found books that are accessible, and as clear that I felt others would enjoy as much as I did. Though this is geared mainly towards the intellectual discussion, I believe anyone interested in the history and politics of fashion would do well to read this book.

For all those currently watching the political climate in America, there have been several major callbacks to those historical figures who came before, though I doubt many knew who were being referenced without the help of the news media in highlighting it. These figures are all discussed here, from something so small but so very vital to everyday life as pockets, to being able to dress ourselves again without the help of others. For so long, aspects of feminine clothing showed ways to make us reliant on others; especially on men. This book discusses the many ways politically how what is considered feminism and fashion are inextricably tied and will continue to change together.

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I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

This book was fascinating. It takes a look at a subject that most people consider shallow and infuses it with a surprising amount of depth!

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Einav Rabinovitch-Fox, Dressed for Freedom The Fashionable Politics of American Feminism, University of Illinois Press 2021.

Thank you, NetGalley, for providing me with this uncorrected proof for review.

Einav Rabinovitch-Fox’s thoughtful approach to a topic that is likely to create some controversy is evident early in her book when, as well as the theory that fashion is a feminist issue, she refers to ‘second wave feminism’ (her quotation marks). I was intrigued by this apparent questioning of a phrase and idea, almost sacrosanct, that permeates much of feminist writing. Both aspects of the book are gratifying in that they suggest it is packed with ideas outside the understood notions of feminist history and fashion and its relationship to feminism and feminists. My belief that this would be an exciting book to review, and optimism have not been misplaced. I loved this engaging read with its solid research and support for the ideas Rabinovitch-Fox expounds.

Beginning with the politics of bloomers, the New Woman seen through Gibson Girls, Shirt Waisters and Rainy Daisies, then flappers and freedom, Einav Rabinovitch-Fox takes the reader through the fashion industry, style, Women’s Liberation, and the legacies of American Feminism, finishing with explanatory notes, a thorough index and a bibliography. As I flick through the index I see familiar titles such as Our Bodies, Ourselves and Off Our Backs, Ms. and Harper’s Bazaar and less familiar, Bust Magazine, Century, Charm and Cheap Chic; styles covering hairstyles, youth culture, corsets, hemlines and white, and black fashion movements; well-known women’s names including Amelia Bloomer, Charlotte Gilman Perkins, Susan B. Anthony, Betty Friedan, Germaine Greer and Helen Gurley Brown; mentions of men such as John Adams, Scott F. Fitzgerald, and John T. Molloy; and references to organisations from the early feminist movements such as women’s suffrage to modern critiques of gender and New York Radical Women.

Underlying the argument that implementing fashion are feminist ideas and ideology is Rabinovitch-Fox’s discussion of waves of feminism. She proposes that women’s activities have been ignored by a commitment to seeing feminist activity in waves. By ignoring a chronological approach to fashion and feminism early and mid-twentieth century work and ideas have been ignored. To add to this argument, it has always seemed odd to me that we talk of women’s activities being ‘hidden from history’ and yet suggest that there were periods in which there were no activists or activity worthy of the name feminist. The argument made here resonates and is supported by the way in which Rabinovitch-Fox’s narrative unfolds over twentieth century feminist activism and ideas associated with fashion. She claims, with convincing examples, quotes and examples of clothing devised for purpose, that women both used and adapted fashion to articulate demands for equality.

Fashion has been the subject of popular culture, with women making their way from poverty to successful entrepreneurs as in the British television program, The House of Elliott, and blockbuster novels in which women’s clothing is either the focus of business enterprises in which women excel, or a feature of their success as seen through fashion. These accounts, although providing women with a career, or designating success outside the domestic sphere, rarely venture into debate about class, race, and women’s freedom through clothing designed to fit that purpose.

However, the topic through Rabinovitch-Fox’s writing with its enthusiasm for description of the various fashions, melding of analysis and personalities, encouragement to the reader to question received understandings, competes with fiction for an engaging read. Add to this that the work is inspiring in its determination to give women a say about something that impacts them from morning to night, in the paid workforce or at home, as career women or parents, as part of a family or friendship group, as that being they look at in the mirror, Dressed for Freedom is an empowering and fascinating work. Studded with insight, this is a book to enjoy, ponder over, and re-read. I embraced every moment of doing so.

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This is a wonderful gem of a book, very well written Einav Rabinovitch-Fox!
I was totally entertained by the history, dialogue and photographs throughout. As I read through the years I found the story enlightening, we automatically make choices now that once were debated and discussed as a matter for women and men to consider.
A superbly written storyline of clothing trends, the feminist side of the age and how fashion has evolved, I loved the ‘bloomers’!

I voluntarily read and reviewed an advanced copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.

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As I was reading I was consistently reminded of one of the core feminist principles which is “their personal is political” and yes that includes fashion. I particularly enjoyed the chapter regarding flappers since I’ve always been so enamored by the 1920s. I will say that I found the first chapter difficult to understand since I am not as familiar with 1880/1890s fashion. However, I throroughly enjoyed the rest of the book and the strong emphasis on how fashion itself is an expression of a woman’s right to choose.

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We take many freedoms for granted, but ignore the freedom we have in choosing what to wear. The evolution of fashion and freedom is an interesting concept well defined.

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This books looks at fashion for women between 1890-1980. It gives us a visual history of women and there fight for freedom and equality.
Working class women, bicycle transportation and rainy days drive the first fashions of freedom. Next paved the way for more movement, thus the flapper. It was only after war that we could even consider sports wear. Grrr. Later bar burning. Bar burning was not something I could get behind. I hate an ill fitted bar, but I personally have to wear one. (My choice).
“These women- whether Gibson Girls, Rainy Daisies, suffragists, bohemian feminists, flappers, fashion designers, Hollywood stars, or radical women’s liberationists- demonstrate not only that fashion and feminism could exist, but that fashion could serve as an effective realm for conveying feminist messages.”
I’m grateful for my wardrobe choices and the women who fought this battle for me. I can imagine not having the choices I have now. Thank you.
Thanks University of Illinois Press via Netgalley.

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I’ve been on a history book kick lately and this one really scratched that itch. Fashion, as we’ve seen recently, has real world impacts (look the spotlight on “fast fashion” of late and all the harm it does). This book shows just how far back fashion has been used as both a tool of freedom as well as a tool of the oppressor. Recommended.

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