Who Really Wears the Trousers and What Happened to the skirt?

Year 2, Term 1
 
I am who I am because of the childhood I had. My scarred knees and chipped teeth are just some of the souvenirs of the many fumbles and tumbles I took. Unfortunately for my mum, I would always much rather have worn football kits to functions than the beautiful dress she’d have spent hours shopping for. I was happiest playing with my boy friends in ‘boys clothes’ but my subconscious knew it wasn’t okay. Now, many years later, I’m still struggling to understand why there are so many dos and don’ts when it comes to dressing for your gender.

Kay Deane, Assistant nursery teacher spoke about how the children she is in contact with are constantly breaking gender ideals and the reaction it receives, “I’ve seen some of the younger boys carrying princess lunch boxes in to nursery in the mornings, but you’d be surprised that it isn’t the other children that comment or tease, because they don’t really care. It’s the parents and some parents say the nastiest things.” Although what Kay had to say didn’t come as much of a surprise to me, I was eager to find more statistics and information on parents and their gender intolerant children. After a quick Internet search my browser was imploding with ‘parental advisory’ websites, some of which had live threads and open chat rooms, which were parents simply giving other parents advice and sharing stories. It didn’t take long until I was in the depths of parenthood. At this point I had read it all, but one thread in particular caught my eye, “My little boy, aged 5 wants to go as Elsa from Frozen to a fancy dress party!!! HELP!!!” Comments from other parents where flying in thick and fast with only 2 of the 6 parents commenting encouraging the child to dress in a girls costume. Experts say it is not unusual for children under the age of 5 to want to wear clothes or dress in costumes that are designated to the opposite sex, so why do parents freak out so much?

I got in contact with one of the parents that where talking in the chat room, Amelia Lodge-Smith is a young mum of two and informed me that her youngest boy likes to dress like a girl. “It started when he was four when he wanted to start dressing himself. He didn’t have a dress on, it wasn’t that dramatic but he’d love to wear coloured or patterned tights. I thought it was hilarious but my husband hated it, obviously.” – obliviously? I’m still finding it hard to understand the problem with children wanting to wear clothes that are for the opposite sex. Children experiment and as adults we shouldn’t suppress our children from something as simple as clothing. In a previous issue of Vanity Fair, Angelina Jolie said that Shiloh, her 4-year-old daughter “likes to dress as a boy. She wants to be a boy. So we [her and ex-husband Brat Pitt] had to cut her hair. She likes to wear boys’ everything.” Oh, Angelina, what a saint.

The issue doesn’t just rest at children and the way they handle their gender flipping fashion trends. Us adults have been stirring the fashion pot for decades. It wasn’t until the late 20th century that trousers for women became an acceptable piece of clothing. To see a woman in trousers would have been scandalous and the woman often would have her wealth and sexuality questioned, imagining that now seems strange doesn’t it

 Although we’re apparently are living in a ‘mans world’, it seems that women have been making the rules for many years when it comes to fashion. Unfortunately for men in today’s society, a long time ago fashion was a woman’s sport and because of that women’s fashion has come on in leaps and bounds compared to men’s fashion. Explaining the complexity of the way women’s wear has developed could take a very long time but understanding the trouser evolution will only take a second. - During the Second World War because of the rationing of clothing, women took to wearing their husbands' clothes to work whilst they were away. Makes sense right? Well because women of the time were so cunning and money savvy with their clothes, when their husbands’ returned and wanted their clothes back women’s trousers became the newest trend and by the summer of 1944 it was reported that sales of women's trousers were five times more than in the previous year. Trousers for everyone!
  
Although some brands such as Rick Owens, Jeremy Scott and Comme de Garçons have been breaking the mould for a while now, fashion houses such as Prada, Gucci and now retail giant Zara have introduced ‘clothes for all. ‘High-end London department store Selfridges released an “A-gender” campaign in 2015. The store uploaded a fashion forward picture onto Instagram with the caption “in the 21st century we’re increasingly aware that gender is not binary.” Although all of these brands are trying there hardest to encourage consumers to just wear clothes and drop the ‘men’ and ‘women’ label. But it seems like the only gender that is getting away with this are the females.

With the help of social media the feminist movement has rise again. Celebrities such as Lady Gaga, Cara Delevign and first lady Michelle Obama are all flying the flag for women’s rights amongst other celebrities. Young women are being flooded with good vibes and reassurance that they can be whoever and do whatever they want. Karl Lagerfeld even staged a feminist march for his SS15 collection, with his models carrying banners and looking fabulous. Not only are the new wave feminists reassuring young women all over the world that they can be whoever they want, it is also telling them that they can wear whatever they want. The popular campaign ‘free the nipple’ is the perfect example of how women are changing the face of equality. Although women have taken the big leap into lad land, the men are yet to break through. Harry Beaven, Stylist, expressed his views on gender fluid fashion. “I’m so used to seeing girls in boyish clothes, you do, you see it all the time and you don’t think twice but when you see a bloke wearing women’s clothes you just stop and look. You have to.” It’s time that men get the same reaction as women!


Its evident that there is still a long way to go when it comes to making A-gendered clothing a regular thing, but I hope that in the near future there will be more outlets for people to go to that just sell clothes, especially for children. I spoke to Fashion Journalist Lucy Bates, to see what her views where on stores opening, or excising stores introducing a ‘clothes for all’ section. “When we’re a lot older it will be okay, but at the moment, in the foreseeable future. I don’t see any change.” Fashion is evolving around us and has a quick turn over, one day something is hot, the next day it could be dropped. So here’s hoping that one day and one day soon there will be an option for us, our children and our children’s children to be able to express themselves and feel comfortable in clothes without them feeling like its wrong.

CONVERSATION

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