Available Formats
The American Look: Fashion, Sportswear and the Image of Women in 1930s and 1940s New York
By (Author) Rebecca Arnold
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
30th September 2008
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
306
Paperback
256
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
506g
From the end of the 1930s through the 1940s, the New York fashion industry came into its own. Sportswear, which had evolved from its sporting origins to include simple casual wear for town and country, travel and leisure, was at the centre of this shift. Sportswear provided busy career women, college girls and housewives with clothes that could be worn on all occasions.Drawing on a wonderful array of sources, from fashion magazines to department store records, this book is the rich and absorbing narrative and analysis of how New York sportswear evolved to become the definitive American style and how a modern fashion aesthetic was born. The story that unfolds reveals, with the aid of some wonderful illustrations, how New York's emergent style became dynamic and modern, like the city itself, expressive of the American ideal of athletic, long-limbed women; and how it tapped into both metropolitan Americanness and the America of wide-open spaces.It explores the designers, such as Claire McCardell, Clare Potter and Tina Leser, themselves embodiments of the modern, active woman, and how they gave middle class American women New York sportswear as an alternative to Parisian-inspired designs.
It looks for the first time at how its style connected not just to ideals of patriotism and democracy, but to current notions of cleanliness and hygiene, and for example, to 1930s theories of body image, and contemporary dance.
"'Written with clarity, elegance and meticulous attention to detail, this important new book raises the bar for fashion scholarship. Here is a genuinely new history that both challenges existing myths about Paris and sets American fashion in its proper cultural and economic context. Rebecca Arnold's adroit study shows how the lens of fashion can be refocused to reveal important insights about gender, identity and nationhood.' - Caroline Evans, Professor of Fashion History and Theory, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design University of the Arts London"
Rebecca Arnold is Guest Professor in Fashion Studies at Stockholm University. She was previously Senior Lecturer at Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design in London where she established the first undergraduate degree in Fashion History & Theory. She has lectured and written widely on twentieth century fashion. Her first book, 'Fashion, Desire & Anxiety: Image & Morality in the Twentieth Century' was published by I.B. Tauris in 2001.