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Women's Bathing and Swimming Costume in the United States cover

Women's Bathing and Swimming Costume in the United States

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About This Book

A historical survey recounts the transformation of women's aquatic attire from restrictive bathing gowns to practical swimming garments, relating style shifts to fashion trends, modesty norms, and technological changes. It defines bathing as immersion for cleansing or therapy and swimming as self-propulsion, then traces customs and costume development from early periods through the rise of sportswear in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The analysis examines construction, fabrics, and social pressures that constrained or enabled movement, and uses period images and museum examples to show how changing dress both mirrored and supported evolving ideas about women's leisure and public participation.

About the Author

Kidwell, Claudia Brush portrait

Claudia Brush Kidwell

Claudia Brush Kidwell is an author known for her contributions to the study of fashion history, particularly in the context of women's attire. Her notable work, "Women's Bathing and Swimming Costume in the United States," explores the evolution of swimwear and its cultural significance throughout American history. Kidwell's research sheds light on the social and aesthetic factors that have influenced women's swimming costumes, making her a valuable figure in the discourse on fashion and gender. Through her scholarship, she has contributed to a deeper understanding of how clothing reflects societal changes.

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