Kemalism on the Catwalk: The Turkish Hat Law of 1925.
Journal of Social History 2011, Spring, 44, 3
-
- €2.99
-
- €2.99
Publisher Description
Introduction Fashion as a symbol of civilization, and clothes as means of identity construction as well as markers of identity are common denominators in all human history. Exploited by rulers and governments to define gender, class, occupation, age, religious affiliation and rank, fashion icons and clothing regulations provide an authentic source for the study of identity formation.
Betting, Sport and the British, 1918-1939 (SECTION I LEISURE AND WORK)
2007
Am I That Body? Seccion Femenina de la FET and the Struggle for the Institution of Physical Education and Competitive Sports for Women in Franco's Spain.
2006
"We Share a Sacred Secret": Gender, Domesticity, And Containment in Transvestia's Histories and Letters from Crossdressers and Their Wives (Section II SEXUALITY)
2011
Memoir, Social History and Commitment: Eric Hobsbawm's Interesting Times (New Topics and Historians)
2003
Crowds and Leisure: Thinking Comparatively Across the 20th Century.
2006
The Civilization of Fashion: At the Origins of a Western Social Institution (Section I NEW APPROACHES TO FASHION AND Emotion) (Essay)
2009