Tuesday, January 21, 2020
The Blue Jean as Cultural Metaophor :: Exploratory Essays Research Papers
The Blue Jean as Cultural Metaophor It may seem odd to consider items of clothing critical components of ââ¬Ëpopular cultureââ¬â¢. Contemporary clothing is a key element in the construction of personal identity; it is used to denote an individual ââ¬Ëstyleââ¬â¢ and a personality unique to its wearer. Yet from the corset to miniskirt, such items serve not only as practical coverings, but also as indicators for the current values and belief systems of a society. Thus I wish to examine what has become a most popular article of clothing ââ¬â the ââ¬Ëblue jeanââ¬â¢1 [1] - in an attempt to unearth some of the socio-cultural phenomenon that is ââ¬Ëpopular cultureââ¬â¢. According to Raymond Williamsââ¬â¢ definition, the ââ¬Ëblue jeanââ¬â¢ qualifies as an object of popular culture due to its (a) wide-spread accessibility, (b) popularity, and (c) construction as an object intended to be popular.2 [2] But perhaps the ââ¬Ëblue jeanââ¬â¢ is not only a product, a piece of commercialism. I assert, rather, that this cultural icon has become a gauge of changing interpretations of masculinity in mainstream American culture. The ââ¬Ëblue jeanââ¬â¢, symbolically, is the white, middle-class, ââ¬ËAll-Americanââ¬â¢ man. I would like to examine what, specifically, makes the ââ¬Ëblue jeanââ¬â¢ stereotypically ââ¬Ëmasculineââ¬â¢. Historically, fashion has upheld socially constructed notions of gender: the corset, for example, helped contain a womanââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëuncontrollableââ¬â¢ body, while the suspender maintained coverage of a manââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëunmentionablesââ¬â¢. Similarly, from its design as a durable work pant for working men and laborers (farmers, railroad men, gold and coal miners, etc.), 3[3] the blue jean is closely associated with a muscular, super-virile ââ¬ËHe-Manââ¬â¢.4 [4] First made wildly popular by the Western films of the 1930s, jeans became identified as a standard item of apparel worn by the ââ¬Ëcowboyââ¬â¢.5 [5] Even mainstream advertising for these durable denim pants featured ââ¬Ëmanlyââ¬â¢ rangers, taming their horses and lassoing the competition (image 1a). The concept of a heroic, blue-jeaned ââ¬ËLone-Rangerââ¬â¢-esque cowboy seems to have remained in popular American psyche, as it is nostalgically associated with a notion of ââ¬Ëold-fashionedââ¬â¢, well-mannered, moral man (image 1b). Authentic cowboys wearing Leviââ¬â¢s at this time were elevated to mythic status, and the pant was now associated more with a rugged American, symbolized by John Wayne. 6[6] (Wayne, for example, always seemed ââ¬Ëready for actionââ¬â¢ with a holster comfortably around his jeans [image 1c]).
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