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corset
(redirected from Corsetry)

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corset

Undergarment originally worn over a chemise. It was constructed with whalebone, which was used to give the garment shape, and laced tightly at the front or back to give women a slim and shapely profile. Despite protests against the physical damage caused by corsets, they were widely used in the 19th century to achieve the then fashionable small waist. In the early 20th century the boned corset was replaced by woven elastic, and later by girdles, as fashion moved away from the slim-waisted profile to a more natural look.

A redesigned form of the corset appeared briefly 1947 to create Christian Dior's ‘New Look’ - a tucked-in waist and flared skirt. In the early 1990s corsets became fashionable again as outer garments, popularized by the singer Madonna when she wore Jean-Paul Gaultier's corset-based designs for her 1990 world tour.



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Leigh Summers enters these debates with Bound to Please: A History of the Victorian Corset, in which she condemns corsetry and the society that sponsored it as oppressive to women and violently misogynist.
It begins with examples of the rigid corsetry, opulent textiles and lavish decoration that reflected the social status of a woman's father or husband, and then moves ahead to the flapper skirts of the '20s, military-inspired suits of the war years, circle skirts of the '50s and contemporary ``power'' suits.
His racist and sexist acts were his downfall with Clark; his corsetry and masks with bulging flesh could always seem insensitive; and his 1993 Wigstock performance, as vividly recounted by Hilton Als, cast the pall of a bloody birth scene in the midst of cavorting drag queens.
 
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