Coco Chanel
By (Author) Linda Simon
Reaktion Books
Reaktion Books
1st September 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
746.92092
Paperback
224
Width 130mm, Height 200mm
To call Coco Chanel a fashion designer hardly captures her social and cultural significance. An iconoclastic entrepreneur, she rebelled against and manipulated gender expectations of her time. Linda Simon teases apart the myth that Chanel and her public collaborated to create, to explore its contradictions: a self-proclaimed recluse who emerged as one of the most spectacular personalities of her time; a brilliant businesswoman who signed away ninety percent of her company; a genius who claimed she was nothing more than an artisan. She examines the world Chanel both reflected and shaped, setting her life and work in a broad context of women's history in France and America, from before the First World War up through the profound social changes of the late 1960s. Drawing upon rich archival sources, Simon provides a lively, clear-eyed biography of a woman whose influence and legend transcend the world of fashion.
'For those who want an up-to-date bio that's swift and savvy, there is Linda Simon's Chanel. It's a slim volume, but even here we get details we don't get elsewhere, including a full chapter on the musical "Coco," which opened on Broadway in 1969 starring Katharine Hepburn (tellingly, Chanel's first choice for the role was the much younger Hepburn: Audrey).' - Wall Street Journal
Linda Simon is Professor of English at Skidmore College, New York. She is the author of The Biography of Alice B. Toklas (Bison, 1991), Genuine Reality: A Life of William James (Harcourt, 1998) and Dark Light: Electricity and Anxiety from the Telegraph to the X-Ray (Meriner, 2005).