Jiggle

(Re)Shaping American Women

By (author) Wendy Burns-Ardolino

Hardback - £88.00

Publication date:

24 December 2007

Length of book:

216 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

ISBN-13: 9780739112984

Jiggle: (Re)Shaping American Women explores the relationship between American women and their bodies as mediated by both traditional and contemporary foundation garments. This post-corsetry study begins in the 1930s with a discussion of traditional foundation garments and continues with an analysis of contemporary shapewear as these garments shape women physically, culturally, and socially. Jiggle focuses on the corporate, cultural, and individual practices and meanings of women's experiences with foundation garments. Referencing trade journals, industry data, statistics, advertisements, and telephone surveys and interviews with women, author Wendy Burns-Ardolino examines how the contested terrain of fashion and beauty culture reflect larger cultural power struggles. Jiggle argues that women should not be complicit in alienating themselves from their bodies, but rather should embrace their bodies' multiple capacities as they practice fasion, femininity, and gendered performatives.
Scholarly, yet accessible, this book traverses key questions about the media, advertising, and fashion. It calls upon us to rethink gender, agency, and embodiment in terms of dressing, shaping, moving, gesturing, and posturing, while never losing sight of how cultural scripts writ large — media representations of women's ideal bodies — shape lived experiences. Part ethnography, part history, and part cultural criticism, Jiggle is more than the sum of its parts: It represents interdisciplinary cultural studies at its best.