20thCenturyTim
New in Town
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- Bloomington, Indiana, USA
I work in a university, so I sometimes read the Chronicle of Higher Education online. I found this article this morning and thought it might be good to share in the Lounge. I cannot say I agree with everything the writer talks about.[huh] In fact, I am tempted to write a critique on my blog, Gentleman Agitator. Anyway here is an excerpt and the link to the full piece.
Suiting Ourselves
"Suiting Ourselves
By EDWARD TENNER
America's classic suited-up zone is surely the two square miles or so north of the New York Public Library at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street in New York, a district home not only to old-line men's retailers but also to many of the financial, legal, and media headquarters where coats and ties are still de rigueur.
The library now features a delightful exhibition, "A Rakish History of Men's Wear," on view until May 6. What unites it is an improbable story: the rise and persistence of the male suit, a garment that shows how cultural evolution can be as bizarre, yet weirdly logical, as biological selection.
Suits are, in fact, unnatural. The peoples of antiquity, the early Middle Ages, and traditional Asia, Africa, and the pre-Columbian Americas dressed beautifully with a minimum of cutting and sewing. Togas, kimonos, pre-Columbian mantles, dashikis — however luxurious or elegant — were not constructed as second skins...
"...In today's office, the rakish dresser is the tall poppy, standing out to be downsized — raked away. Even violators of the corporate dress code echo conservative stereotypes: Steve Jobs's blue jeans, black turtlenecks, and rimless glasses combine to mark him as the officiating worker-priest of design...
...Rather, suits are more useful than ever for shielding people's true selves."
Suiting Ourselves
"Suiting Ourselves
By EDWARD TENNER
America's classic suited-up zone is surely the two square miles or so north of the New York Public Library at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street in New York, a district home not only to old-line men's retailers but also to many of the financial, legal, and media headquarters where coats and ties are still de rigueur.
The library now features a delightful exhibition, "A Rakish History of Men's Wear," on view until May 6. What unites it is an improbable story: the rise and persistence of the male suit, a garment that shows how cultural evolution can be as bizarre, yet weirdly logical, as biological selection.
Suits are, in fact, unnatural. The peoples of antiquity, the early Middle Ages, and traditional Asia, Africa, and the pre-Columbian Americas dressed beautifully with a minimum of cutting and sewing. Togas, kimonos, pre-Columbian mantles, dashikis — however luxurious or elegant — were not constructed as second skins...
"...In today's office, the rakish dresser is the tall poppy, standing out to be downsized — raked away. Even violators of the corporate dress code echo conservative stereotypes: Steve Jobs's blue jeans, black turtlenecks, and rimless glasses combine to mark him as the officiating worker-priest of design...
...Rather, suits are more useful than ever for shielding people's true selves."