Language: English
A History of Women's Underwear Accessories Actors Actresses Advertising Amber J. Keyser Anthropology Apparel Beyonce Beyonce Knowles Body Image Body Positivity Bra Brassiere Clothing Clothing Factories Clothing Production Corset Corsetry Corsets Cultural Tradition Culture Customs Dress Edwardian Age Fashion Fast Fashion Female Body Femininity Feminist Movement Feminist Theory Film Film Theory Garment Workers Gender Identity Girdle Girl Girls Girls & Women Great Depression History Hosiery Industrial revolution Invention and Technology Jazz Age LGBTQ Lingerie Madonna Male Gaze Manufacturing Masculinity Men's Underwear Menstrual Cycle Menstruation Models Nonfiction Periods Religion Sexuality Sexualization Social Commentary Social Studies Suffragettes Technology Television Textile Waste Traditions Transgender Twenty-First Century Books Undergarments Underneath It All Underneath It All: A History of Women's Underwear Underwear Victoria's Secret Whaling Woman Women Women's Bodies Women's History Women's rights World War I World War II Young Adult Nonfiction Young Adults feminism gender invention
Publisher: Lerner Publishing Group
Published: Jan 1, 2018
Description:
For most of human history, the garments women wore under their clothes were hidden. The earliest underwear provided warmth and protection. But eventually, women's undergarments became complex structures designed to shape their bodies to fit the fashion ideals of the time.
In the modern era, undergarments are out in the open, from the designer corsets Madonna wore on stage to Beyoncé's pregnancy announcement on Instagram. This feminist exploration of women's underwear reveals the intimate role lingerie plays in defining women's bodies, sexuality, gender identity, and body image. It is a story of control and restraint but also female empowerment and self-expression. You will never look at underwear the same way again.
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From School Library Journal
Gr 7 Up—The biologist and writer offers a fascinating examination of an often under-explored facet of life—underwear. Undergarments for women have evolved throughout the centuries from simple, plain cloth tunics and elaborate corsets made with steel or whalebone stays and to today's contemporary bralettes and more. Historically, Keyser asserts, underwear is designed to create what ever is perceived as a perfect body. Examples are the Gibson Girl and today's Victoria Secret Angels. The book is divided into eight chapters that follow a historical time line and place the garments in perspective with the events and culture of the time period discussed. Chapters are illustrated and contain sidebars. The writing utilizes contemporary language and examples, citing Beyoncé and ad campaigns that challenge stereotypical views of beauty. Highlights of the book are the author's citation of women historians, writers, and entrepreneurs. VERDICT A bit niche but endlessly fascinating, a great addition to nonfiction collections.—Patricia Ann Owens, formerly at Illinois Eastern Community College, Mt. Carmel
Review
"Spanning several centuries in eight succinct chapters, Keyser's narrative takes a look at women's undergarments--their history, political and social implications, sexual and fashion statements, and complex evolution. Told in chronological fashion from Greek and Roman times, the account begins by explaining how underwear originated as supportive leather or cloth straps. Keyser is careful to clarify that the record-keeping was done by men, so modern understanding of the purpose of these undergarments is limited. Fabrics and materials used over the ages range from leather to latex, all in a dizzying variety of forms including farthingales, corsets, bustiers, and bras. Generously distributed throughout the book are images and anecdotes that contextualize the use of undergarments during different periods and in various countries. While the subject matter can be interesting at times--many women give up their corsets during World War I so that the steel can be used instead to build an entire battleship--Keyser struggles to keep a consistent tone. She often toggles between explanations of women's oppression and how later undergarments symbolized empowerment and self-expression. As the chronicling gets closer to the present day, the book shifts to discussions of body image, exploitation, advertising, unions, and celebrities and their influences. The brevity of the chapters may leave readers with little sense of closure or only partial understanding. A serviceable introduction to the history of women's undergarments, with some nuggets of importance and insight."--Kirkus Reviews
--Journal
"Corsets, open-crotch drawers, farthingales, chastity belts, and bullet bras all find their place in Keyser's revealing history of women's underwear, which goes beyond a mere accounting of fashion trends. As stated in her introduction, undergarments are closely tied to 'the complex interactions of gender, sexuality, politics, and body image, ' and Keyser incorporates these topics with unblushing candor. Early chapters take readers through the evolution of underwear's form and function, from basic bindings to lingerie and corsetry, noting that a lady's underwear options were dictated by her class and shifting beauty ideals--typically dictated by men. The Male Gaze is directly addressed in sections describing the rise of the 'bombshell' during WWII and Victoria's Secret, originally created to sell lingerie to men. Similarly, women's rights and the reappropriation of female sexuality (thanks, Madonna!) get their due diligence, as do modern companies supporting trans individuals. Inset boxes offer relevant trivia, while illustrations utilize iconic images of women who shaped, embodied, or challenged an era's notion of femininity. This multidisciplinary, discussion-worthy text reshapes how we view history."--Booklist
--Journal
"The biologist and writer offers a fascinating examination of an often under-explored facet of life--underwear. Undergarments for women have evolved throughout the centuries from simple, plain cloth tunics and elaborate corsets made with steel or whalebone stays and to today's contemporary bralettes and more. Historically, Keyser asserts, underwear is designed to create what ever is perceived as a perfect body. Examples are the Gibson Girl and today's Victoria Secret Angels. The book is divided into eight chapters that follow a historical time line and place the garments in perspective with the events and culture of the time period discussed. Chapters are illustrated and contain sidebars. The writing utilizes contemporary language and examples, citing Beyoncé and ad campaigns that challenge stereotypical views of beauty. Highlights of the book are the author's citation of women historians, writers, and entrepreneurs. A bit niche but endlessly fascinating, a great addition to nonfiction collections."--School Library Journal
--Journal
"Aiming at readers well past giggling age, Keyser presents a truncated but thoughtful overview of women's undergarments. Opening chapters focus, predictably, on history: chest binding for women exercising in third century BCE Sicily; loose halter-style garments in Han China 'which were said to remove desire as well as protect the heart and belly from disease'; caged underskirts, corsets, and bloomers over the centuries in Anglo-western countries; and current designs. Discussion includes the absence of under-wearing as well, and the recent discovery of an unmistakable fourteenth-century bra in an Austrian castle. More engrossing, however, is Keyser's discourse on modern lingerie and corseting as both a proud statement of sexuality and an expression of male fantasy and the conflicted attitudes toward glam underfashions that result. She makes cursory but valuable introductions to critical theory--Laura Mulvey's 'male gaze' and bell hooks' 'oppositional gaze'--which will point serious readers along a path to further investigation. Designers addressing the practical and aesthetic needs of transgender patrons are also noted. While not an exhaustive history, this is an engaging read for anyone with an overflowing underwear drawer and a useful resource for teens whose interest is more scholarly than sartorial. Color photographs, sources notes, bibliographies, and an index are included."--The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
--Journal