“Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body

Taking as its inspiration Joanne Entwistle’s understanding of the “power-dressing” phenomenon that took over the United States from the late 1970s as a discourse on the body, sexuality, gender performance, and power, this paper considers the implications of power-dressing when applied to another ite...

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Main Author: Stephanie Lever
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2023-07-01
Series:ZoneModa Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zmj.unibo.it/article/view/17116
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author Stephanie Lever
author_facet Stephanie Lever
author_sort Stephanie Lever
collection DOAJ
description Taking as its inspiration Joanne Entwistle’s understanding of the “power-dressing” phenomenon that took over the United States from the late 1970s as a discourse on the body, sexuality, gender performance, and power, this paper considers the implications of power-dressing when applied to another iteration of gendered performance; one which instead of carefully negotiating between masculine and feminine traits, instead presents a hyper-feminine, hyper-sexualised professional appearance to the ends of power and professional success. However, the professional backdrop of this research is not of the office but of sex-work (defined in the Dictionary as “a person employed in the sex industry, as a prostitute, pornographic film actor, stripper, nude model, or creator of sexually explicit online content”), and celebrity. This paper uses the case studies of two women who employ exaggerated feminine performance, and explicitly harness, rather than “manage” their sexuality, in their professional careers during the 90s and early 2000s – writer, filmmaker and ex sex-worker Virginie Despentes, and media personality (and sex-tape star) Paris Hilton. My aim is to explore how hyper-feminine dress and presentation, synonymous with unacceptable female sexuality, might interact with questions of power and agency, and subvert historic theories on the subject.
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spelling doaj.art-761f8076164248928831f0a4a6c5c7df2023-07-26T14:44:18ZengUniversity of BolognaZoneModa Journal2611-05632023-07-01131516410.6092/issn.2611-0563/1711615475“Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female BodyStephanie Lever0Parsons Paris, The New SchoolTaking as its inspiration Joanne Entwistle’s understanding of the “power-dressing” phenomenon that took over the United States from the late 1970s as a discourse on the body, sexuality, gender performance, and power, this paper considers the implications of power-dressing when applied to another iteration of gendered performance; one which instead of carefully negotiating between masculine and feminine traits, instead presents a hyper-feminine, hyper-sexualised professional appearance to the ends of power and professional success. However, the professional backdrop of this research is not of the office but of sex-work (defined in the Dictionary as “a person employed in the sex industry, as a prostitute, pornographic film actor, stripper, nude model, or creator of sexually explicit online content”), and celebrity. This paper uses the case studies of two women who employ exaggerated feminine performance, and explicitly harness, rather than “manage” their sexuality, in their professional careers during the 90s and early 2000s – writer, filmmaker and ex sex-worker Virginie Despentes, and media personality (and sex-tape star) Paris Hilton. My aim is to explore how hyper-feminine dress and presentation, synonymous with unacceptable female sexuality, might interact with questions of power and agency, and subvert historic theories on the subject.https://zmj.unibo.it/article/view/17116hyper-femininityfashionidentitypower-dressingslut-chic
spellingShingle Stephanie Lever
“Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
ZoneModa Journal
hyper-femininity
fashion
identity
power-dressing
slut-chic
title “Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
title_full “Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
title_fullStr “Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
title_full_unstemmed “Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
title_short “Power Dressing”: Hyper-Feminine Performance and the Professionally Self-Sexualised Female Body
title_sort power dressing hyper feminine performance and the professionally self sexualised female body
topic hyper-femininity
fashion
identity
power-dressing
slut-chic
url https://zmj.unibo.it/article/view/17116
work_keys_str_mv AT stephanielever powerdressinghyperfeminineperformanceandtheprofessionallyselfsexualisedfemalebody