I have to admit, I knew girls who thought that part of the thrill of minis weren't just showing off the legs, but seeing how short they could wear them without getting in trouble by adults. These girls didn't mind their underwear being shown. Thank God we didn't wear thongs back in the days.![]()
OK, I think I get your view. Thanks for the exchange.
I do believe 'womens lib' was what inspired women of the 60s to wear clothing that was socially unacceptable. Mini-skirts got you kicked out of school. You couldn't wear it to work, etc. Women who did were considered whores. But by the late 60s, sure, it was starting to be less shocking to the 'Mad Men' public. Sure, it became fashion and Star Trek was a part of the mainstreaming of it into mere fashion, but that wasn't why women started wearing them. Certainly bra burning (a dubious idea, I'm sure!) was also about women's liberation. Such was the times, as far as I know.
The early to mid 60s were incredibly conservative. The rule in school was, above the knee... you're out! Haven't you ever heard of this?
The fact such things are soon swallowed by the mainstream consumer culture as fashion is typical. Such things are always taken up by corporations to sell whatever is popular. I feel this is why you miss the social political beginnings of such things and only see them as normalized mainstream culture.
Therin of Andor's post earlier demonstrates the feminist aspect of the mini-skirt during those times well. He's always a fountain of info!
First of all, I have to say that yes, Therin most certainly is always a fountain of information. And I'm sure Grace is sincere in what she says - I think it's fascinating that she equates those silly uniforms with feminism. And I won't say there is no connection between feminism and fashion - I mean, a miniskirt pretty much has to be more liberating than a hoop skirt.
But I will say that it is very easy to overstate it, and I think that's what's happened here. There are a number of problems with the "oh, it's feminism" approach to fashion. The major problem specific to our discussion here is that even if miniskirts might have been considered revolutionary at one time, by the time TOS debuted, miniskirts were entering the mainstream - they weren't quite there, but they were extremely common, particularly for girls and young women, and by the time it went off the air, they were totally mainstream. It only took a couple of years. I won't say every parent of a teenage daughter was thrilled to bits - can't blame them, really - and some employers no doubt still resisted for a while, but to refer to miniskirts as "socially unacceptable" is just flat-out incorrect. They were haute couture that disseminated down to the masses with incredible rapidity.
If they had been that shocking would the network have allowed microminis on one of its primetime shows? I don't think so.
It actually took a lot longer for slacks to be socially acceptable for women than it did for short skirts - that is, outside of the most casual of events. Even well into the 1970s, there were upscale restaurants that wouldn't seat women who were wearing slacks, and long after workplaces had given up on controlling skirt length, they still didn't let female employees wear slacks.
So if TPTB at Trek really wanted to show how liberated the women were, why not have them wear slacks to work? That was actually pretty daring then - almost unheard of. And it remained daring well after the show went off the air, too.
Thus, I don't think TPTB really were nearly as interested in showing liberated women - they wanted to show beautiful women, including their legs. Which is OK, I just wish they wouldn't obfuscate with all this pseudo-sociology.
Yes, I remember rules about how short skirts could be. It is what we call "a dress code." Is this concept really that shocking? Although I was affected by dress codes only in the 1960s (when I was in elementary school) and the 1970s (when I was in junior high and high school), I am reliably informed by women older than me that there were dress codes during earlier eras, too, including those that didn't have a whole lot of feminism going on.
And there are dress codes NOW, this very minute.
So what makes the ones the 1960s and 1970s that much more historically significant? Why is "Your skirt must touch your knee" so much more monumental than "Your shirt must have a collar and it must be tucked in," which was the rule for boys when my older brother started junior high?
The larger problem with the "sexy = liberated" theory of fashion is that it simply doesn't fit in well with most of fashion history. Sex has been in style during lots of periods, including those when women had zero power.
I mean, in Georgian England, ladies dampened their underclothing so that their dresses would cling very closely to their bodies - the really daring ones dispensed with petticoats entirely, but that was considered very shocking and downright slutty. So ladies who didn't want to be slutty just took steps to minimize the volume of their underclothing - the idea was to show just about every curve, and with the shear fabrics that were in style then, you could, too. Was this done out of feminism? I don't think so.
In the 1840s, ladies wore dresses that bared just about their entire chests, with the nipples just barely covered. Was this done out of feminism? I don't think so.
I think what makes a fashion choice liberating or not has nothing to do with short skirts or slacks or sexiness...it has to do with having a choice. Having to wear a miniskirt is no more liberating than having to wear hoops if you are wearing it because you think you have to.
The whole point is to respect the woman for what she does and stands for, not for what she looks like. If she shows up wearing only a sandwich board, she should get the same respect as if she was wearing a business suit.
I'm sorry. Where in the mid-60s did women and girls get to wear minis? A very, very, conservative time. Right? The mini then came out and it was picked up in the popular culture as a women's liberation symbol. Why is this so hard?
The funny thing is, I'm agreeing with your timeline. You just can't seem to accept the women's liberation thing. I'm not putting feminism down here, it was just a fashion thing that was popularized by the liberation movement of the mid to late 60s.
It does seem to be the history.
Though, I get what you mean about 'overstating' it. But then, it was the 60s.
Sounds like my reality at the time. I lived in a place that got winter, and we could wear pants TO school, but had to change in the restroom when we got there back into a dress or skirt.I wasn't allowed (except for snow days, which we didn't have very many of in my Southern California hometown) to wear slacks to school until 1972. And BTW, my dad, who never said a word about skirt length, as far as I can remember, never did approve of his daughters wearing slacks to school - he just gave way to keep peace in the home.
I don't see how this conflicts with my point. I'm not arguing that prejudice only exists against women. My point is it's wrong regardless of who the target is.The whole point is to respect the woman for what she does and stands for, not for what she looks like. If she shows up wearing only a sandwich board, she should get the same respect as if she was wearing a business suit.
Lets turn this one around shall we.
Two men are up for an interview in the corporate business world. Be it a law firm, financial place, computer firm, or hell, Paramount Studios.
Person A shows up in a nice suit, looks like he SHOULD be working there.
Person B shows up...okay, maybe not a stoner look, but something a little informal, like he was about ready to go out and have a few beers with some friends after the interview.
Now, who do you think would get the job? The one who actually looked PROFESSIONAL. Not the one that looked like they were there just because he had to and had no expectations of actually getting hired.
Apperances do count in certain environments. Its not just how you conduct yourself, its how you look as well. Part of the presentation of you as a person.
Sounds like my reality at the time. I lived in a place that got winter, and we could wear pants TO school, but had to change in the restroom when we got there back into a dress or skirt.I wasn't allowed (except for snow days, which we didn't have very many of in my Southern California hometown) to wear slacks to school until 1972. And BTW, my dad, who never said a word about skirt length, as far as I can remember, never did approve of his daughters wearing slacks to school - he just gave way to keep peace in the home.
My dad hated me wearing slacks. First, I got him to agree to twice a week (8th grade.) I was sneaky and wore a skirt and top on Wednesday, when I had church youth group, so I took jeans to school to take to church afterwards. You better believe the second I hit the school, I changed out of that skirt!So I only had to wear a dress twice a week.
By ninth grade (1972) it was all over. No one cared if you wore slacks or jeans to school. My dad never said a word when I switched over totally to jeans and slacks in 9th grade. Dresses were still rather short all the way through my senior year (1976.)
So for me, slacks were liberating. Minis weren't. Minis were about having to follow fashion (there WERE no alternatives) and trying not to flash my underwear. Sorry, but showing panties ain't liberating.
First things first:
Second, we graduated from high school the very same year. Eek!Let me guess: Your class motto was "Spirit of '76"?
First, we need to define "mid-'60s." Miniskirts burst into fashion in 1966 - the designer was Mary Quant. Really. She got the idea, Wiki tells me.
, in other words...they don't rely on the "stronger males" to protect them, THEN I find it much easier to respect them. Such a character is rare, which is a shame.
^ Oh, sure. But I think the OP's question isn't, "What do you think will be the fashion trends for professional women in the 23rd century?" At least I'm pretty sure about that. 'Cause how can we even guess?
I think what Gotham Central wants us to consider is "Does how a woman dresses affect your opinion of her? If she's supposed to be a professional, should she dress like one?"
And honestly, I think just about everybody has to answer yes to the question of "Does how a woman dresses affect your opinion of her?" Standards vary, but just about everybody has some standards, however much they vary. I might dislike bare midriffs in the office - and in fact I do - whereas someone else thinks bare midriffs are fine and considers suits too stuffy. Someone else is fine with both bare midriffs and suits but thinks flipflops are ridiculous, and then a different person is fine with bare midriffs, suits and flipflops, but (like a hardline vegan friend of mine) equates wearing leather with wearing "corpses."
And someone else might think all that revealing stuff is great...but only so long as someone they consider attractive is wearing it. I have heard that opinion before.
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