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London Review of Books Christmas Books

Leg-and-Skirt Management subscriber-only content

Anne Hollander

  • Nazi Chic? Fashioning Women in the Third Reich by Irene Guenther  Buy this book
  • Fashion under Fascism: Beyond the Black Shirt by Eugenia Paulicelli  Buy this book

Fashion was always famous for its power, but only quite recently have people believed it has meaning. From time to time during the last two hundred years, writers have uneasily asserted that everything important about individuals, even about whole civilisations, could be learned from what people wore; but by the end of the 20th century, the meaning of clothing had become a respectable subject in its own right. During those same two centuries, women’s apparel became ever more conspicuous and volatile, acquiring exclusive claim to the term ‘fashion’. Male dress, on the other hand, became more and more inconspicuous; its changes looked more like the small shifts in tribal custom, while fashion became more unrespectable and frivolous.

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Anne Hollander wrote the text for Woman in the Mirror, Richard Avedon’s last collection of photographs. She is now at work on a study of literary clothing.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Special Frocks
Jenny Turner on Justine Picardie

Prada Queen
Elaine Showalter goes shopping

Diary
Jenny Diski is dragged to the shoe shop

At the V&A
Peter Campbell on fashion photography