Hardback : $40.21
The corset is probably the most controversial garment in the history of fashion. Although regarded as an essential element of fashionable dress from the Renaissance into the twentieth century, the corset was also frequently condemned as an instrument of torture and the cause of ill health. Whey did women continue to don steel and whalebone corsets for four hundred years? And why did they stop? This lavishly illustrated book offers fascinating and often surprising answers to these questions. Valeric Steele, one of the world's most respected fashion historians, explores the cultural history of the corset, demolishing myths about this notorious garment and revealing new information and perspectives on its changing significance over the centuries. Whereas most historians have framed the history of the corset in terms of oppression vs. liberation and fashion vs. health and comfort, Steele contends that women's experiences of corsetry varied considerably and cannot be fully understood within these narrow frames. Drawing on extensive research in textual, visual, and material sources, the author disproves the beliefs that the corset was dangerously unhealthy and was designed primarily for
The corset is probably the most controversial garment in the history of fashion. Although regarded as an essential element of fashionable dress from the Renaissance into the twentieth century, the corset was also frequently condemned as an instrument of torture and the cause of ill health. Whey did women continue to don steel and whalebone corsets for four hundred years? And why did they stop? This lavishly illustrated book offers fascinating and often surprising answers to these questions. Valeric Steele, one of the world's most respected fashion historians, explores the cultural history of the corset, demolishing myths about this notorious garment and revealing new information and perspectives on its changing significance over the centuries. Whereas most historians have framed the history of the corset in terms of oppression vs. liberation and fashion vs. health and comfort, Steele contends that women's experiences of corsetry varied considerably and cannot be fully understood within these narrow frames. Drawing on extensive research in textual, visual, and material sources, the author disproves the beliefs that the corset was dangerously unhealthy and was designed primarily for
Valerie Steele is chief curator and acting director, The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology, State University of New York. She is founder and editor of Fashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body and Culture. Among her many publications are Fifty Years of Fashion: New Look to Now (ISBN 0 300 08738 1, pb. 15.00) and China Chic: East Meets West (with John S. Major) (ISBN 0 300 07930 3, 35.00), both published by Yale University Press.
"Obligatory reading for fashion historians."
"The Corset is at once couture eye candy and intellectually
enlightening."
"This is cultural scholarship and social history at its absolute
best."
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |