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History of Men's Fashion PDF

348 Pages·1996·56.938 MB·English
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HOUSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY aL RQ116416361 Until recently, the complex universe of men’s fashion has rarely received the kind of interest, scholarly attention, or fetishism of which women’s fashion has been the object. Yet the study of vestimentary logic and its metamorphoses provides an excel- lent means of going directly to the heart of social history. As Ele distinctions began to break down in the last quarter of thé eighteenth century, the aspirations of the upwardly-- mobile urban classes were such that people no longer dressed according to their rank, as etiquette had previou required, but rather, according to the re ak to which they aspired. Fashion became and remained a stage on which social transfor- mations could be played out—an experi- mental laboratory, a social testing-ground, and an ideological crucible. A History of Men’s Fashion is divided into four parts that follow the sartorial evo- lution of the male wardrobe from the era of Beau Brummell, which created the model of the gentleman and the dandy, to the “anti- fashion” trends of the early 1990s. Part One (1700-1850) traces the era of tails and the frock coat, the emergence of the pantaloon and the influence of Anglomania on Euro- pean fashion. Men’s fashion in Europe’s fin de siécle climate, and the impact of ready- made garments are discussed in Part Two (1850-1914). Part Three (1914-1940) introduces thé aesthetic of the sweater and the variations on the suit and vest as part of the post-World War I moral liberation and economic euphoria, and traces changes all the way through to the New Deal arid the new American e legance. The post-World War II fashion revolution is described in Part Four (1940-1990) from zoot suits, spurred by the black American jazz scene, to London’s Mod fashion of the 60s, Pierre Cardin and the new French style, the emer- gence of Italian chic, and the hippie and punk styles of the 70s. The book is com- pleted by a perceptive discussion of contem- porary designers such as Jean-Paul Gaultier, Giorgio Armani, Ralph Lauren, Comme des Garcons, and Yohji Yea mamoto. F ‘arid Chenoune’s lively and accessible text is filled with amusing anecdotes about male dress and grooming. He vividly places style transformations in the context of con- temporary fashion criticism, history, social etiquette, manufacturing and marketing (continued on back flap) ISBN: 2-08013-536-8 A HISTORY OF MEN’S FASHION Street scene In Hanover, circa 1960 FARID CHENOUNE A HISTORY OF MEN’S FASHION Translated from the French by Deke Dusinberre Preface by Richard Martin Flammarion Paris - New York. TT ROLIbY 1b3b1 AUTHOR’S ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: A History of Men’s Fashion was written with the assistance of a grant from the Fédération Francaise des Industries du Vétement Masculin, and I would particularly like to thank its president, Monsieur Claude Miserey, for this support. For Christine, I would also like to thank Sylvie Durastanti for my delightful fellow her help in translating certain texts from English, as well as Hervé Labrid for his close traveler and unraveler reading of the manuscript. Finally, warm acknowledgments are due to Pierre Brochet and to Valérie Mettais from Les Editions Flammarion, who contributed three years of unstinting enthusiasm and professionalism to bring this book to fruition. Copyediting by Christine Schultz-Touge Picture research: Maryse Hubert (19th century) and Catherine Aygalinc (20th century) Graphic design: Pascale Ogée Layout: Dominique Grosmangin, Edidom Copyright © 1993 ADAGP Paris for the works by Jean Béraud, Robert Delaunay, and Man Ray. Copyright © 1993 SPADEM, Paris for the works by Leonetto Cappiello, Francois d’Albignac, Georges Lepape, Paul Nadar, the Seeberger and Sem brothers. All rights reserved for the works by other artists. Flammarion 26, rue Racine 75006 Paris Copyright © 1993 Flammarion Reprinted in 1995 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic, photocopy, or otherwise, without written permission from Flammarion. ISBN: 2-8013-536-8 N° @édition: 1030 Dépot légal: September 1993 Printed in France CONTENTS PREFACE Il Lounge Suit & Business Suit by Richard Martin 1914-1940 Curator The Costume Institute 13. The Avant-Garde Wardrobe 135 The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 3 14 Cadence and Decadence in the Roaring Twenties 143 15 Oxford Bags, Plus-Fours, Tweeds and Flannels 156 16 Letters from London 163 17 Shoulders in the Thirties: The Birth of I a Classic Look 173 Dress Coat & Frock Coat 18 A New Deal: American Stylishness 181 1760-1850 19 Hoods and Good Lookers: Underworld Fashion 195 The Brummell Era: French Revolution and Anglomania IV The Century that Wore Pants 23 Pin Stripes & Black Leather 1940-1990 London Dandy, Paris Fop 31 The Tailor’s Art: 20 Zazous and Zoot Suits: Cutting, Measuring, Accounting 40 Funny Fashions for a Phony War 203 Romantics in Age-Old Clothes 49 21 A Marshall Plan for Saint-Germain-des-Prés 211 Male Bonding: 22 Heavyweights and Featherweights in the 1950s Za Boulevard and Jockey-Club 58 23 Teddy Boys, Leather Boys: From Frock Coat to Jeans 229 24 Tempo di Roma: Europe, Italian-Style 241 Il Overcoat & Morning Coat 25 Pop Fashion on Carnaby Street 251 1850-1914 26‘ French-Style Mods, 1961-1968: The “Minets” 263 27 ~The Cardin Line and New French Style 274 Overcoats and Ready-Made Fictions 65 28 Anti-Fashion, Revival Rage 285 Second Empire Swells 29 Kings of Sportswear, Princes and Victorian Gentlemen Gl of Unstructured Tailoring 2a Fin de siecle I: 30 “Tribes and Fashion Victims 299 Stovepipes and Iron Collars 87 31 Fashion Winners, Fashion Losers 307 10 Fin de siecle II: High-Life Elegance during la Belle Epoque 101 Notes 318 11 Fin de siecle III: Bibliography 329 Edwardian Sportiness, Comfort, Style 113 Index 331 12 1900 Street Apparel 121 Photographic acknowledgements 336

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