This thesis examines the meanings of forms of fashioned femininity in Britain in the post-war period. Drawing on a range of popular, academic and media texts, the widespread social, political and cultural disdain for the feminised decorative is defined and discussed. Modernist rhetoric and taste, the championing of design austerity, masculinity, bohemianism and appropriations of functional working-class fashioning are shown to be linked to the emergent tastes of Second-Wave feminism. In contrast, fashionings associated with working class and other disdained communities of women, defined here as 'feminine excess', whether in hair, make-up, jewellery or dress is shown to be demonised across historical and contemporary contexts by the arbiters...
Feminists have long been stereotyped as disapproving of traditional forms of feminine expression, sa...
Art history has enriched the study of material culture as a scholarly field. This interdisciplinary ...
Glamour is often understood as a capitalist technology of allure and as a device with which women ar...
The research focuses on 'alternative' femininities through the participants' narratives about their ...
This project explores the relationship between fashion and class for women in contemporary British s...
The book, examining the relationship between fashion, gender and representation in Britain in the tw...
This article is part of a larger research project on postwar feminism and lesbian pulp fiction. Its...
This thesis examines how "femininity" as a style of the body is considered within feminist scholarsh...
This research addresses the way in which individual and collective identities are constructed throug...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
This thesis considers anxieties and concepts of agency related to femininity as represented through ...
Feminists have long critiqued childlike constructions of femininity – from Wollstonecraft to de Beau...
This narrative case study explores how material culture, in the form of dress, grooming and accessor...
This thesis discusses the experience had by women who attended college in America in the 1950s along...
The thesis explores current debates ,around postfeminism and neoliberalism, and young women's articu...
Feminists have long been stereotyped as disapproving of traditional forms of feminine expression, sa...
Art history has enriched the study of material culture as a scholarly field. This interdisciplinary ...
Glamour is often understood as a capitalist technology of allure and as a device with which women ar...
The research focuses on 'alternative' femininities through the participants' narratives about their ...
This project explores the relationship between fashion and class for women in contemporary British s...
The book, examining the relationship between fashion, gender and representation in Britain in the tw...
This article is part of a larger research project on postwar feminism and lesbian pulp fiction. Its...
This thesis examines how "femininity" as a style of the body is considered within feminist scholarsh...
This research addresses the way in which individual and collective identities are constructed throug...
This dissertation investigates the cultural meaning ascribed to feminine fashionable objects such as...
This thesis considers anxieties and concepts of agency related to femininity as represented through ...
Feminists have long critiqued childlike constructions of femininity – from Wollstonecraft to de Beau...
This narrative case study explores how material culture, in the form of dress, grooming and accessor...
This thesis discusses the experience had by women who attended college in America in the 1950s along...
The thesis explores current debates ,around postfeminism and neoliberalism, and young women's articu...
Feminists have long been stereotyped as disapproving of traditional forms of feminine expression, sa...
Art history has enriched the study of material culture as a scholarly field. This interdisciplinary ...
Glamour is often understood as a capitalist technology of allure and as a device with which women ar...