essaysbysean.blogspot.com
"Wearing a corset certainly changes your state of mind."
Radha Mitchell, Australian actress
It’s queer how a man’s humble underwear can symbolize so much…
Radha Mitchell, Australian actress
It’s queer how a man’s humble underwear can symbolize so much…
Back when the world was young, and
so was I, I took a college communications class. One day the teacher tried to
show us a short Oscar-winning documentary, Neighbours, on the terribly grave issue of international peace.
Unfortunately, it was hard for us to “relate,” as we kept laughing and laughing
at how the two neighbours were wearing such wide legged pants…
Looking back, I can see we didn’t
mind wearing clothes from our grandparents, such as top hats, waistcoats or
“faded feathers from salvation army counters”; and we didn’t mind wearing the
buckskin jackets of our childhood—we just didn’t want to dress like our
parents. Today I still wince when I first see some young men wearing wide pants, nerd
frame glasses and plaid shirts, but then I remember: They aren’t dressing like
my father—they’re dressing like their grandfathers. To them it’s OK, a
scattered few even wear fedoras: on them it looks “retro.”
You can’t take fashion too
seriously; it’s a gut thing: if ever I buy a businessman’s trench coat,
complete with epaulets, I’m not going to insist it include, as many coats do, a “real” loop for my
pistol lanyard. I still get a little miffed during every stampede when people
talk of dressing like a “real” cowboy, or when some fool in the bar tells me my
bandana isn’t knotted like a “real” cowboy’s bandana. After all, I would never
tell a civilian his trendy khaki isn’t like a real soldier.
Personal fashion can be frivolous, and also
“the personal is political”: At the end of the day, fashion may carry a freight
load of symbolism. Underwear too.
When I was a member of the
longhaired “younger generation,” a.k.a. the “now generation,” a generation
uninterested in historical films where the characters had short hair, a
generation that tweaked the hair length of young doctors on the TV show
M.A.S.H.,—but not for the “older generation” guy Colonel Potter—I was then
wearing my own hair proudly short. I was proudly in the service, at a base that
is now, alas, defunct: CFB (Canadian Forces Base) Currie Barracks.
Of course none of us young bucks
would be caught dead looking like our fathers. One day an older corporal was
saying how over at the quartermaster stores you could still buy a great coat. A
fan of romantic nostalgia, I went over to see, and found myself eying some
olive drab boxer shorts. … not to look
like the dreaded “older generation,” but for nostalgia, to be like a young
World War II hero. At the time we were all wearing thin synthetic baggy “combat
pants,” like green pajamas, and…well… I guess I was a leader, for soon the
other guys were buying these shorts too.
“Have you heard?” someone asked me
with outrage, “Pelletier was wearing his boxers out on a Friday night! What if
he gets lucky? As soon as he takes down his jeans a girl will burst out
laughing!”
A few years later I was a civilian,
lounging in the university drama student’s lounge, spying on them actually,
enjoying their freedom and energy, when a short woman with short dark hair, a
real “cutie pattutie” came in wearing olive drab shorts. The other actors were
intrigued; they asked her, and she explained she was wearing men’s boxer
shorts. At the time, as a starving student, with old jeans and old underwear, I
was tempted to get a laugh by pulling out my thick green waistband... But they
didn’t know me, and I judged at the time it would not quiiiite have been funny.
And besides, only a crazy nerd would ever wear boxers.
About a decade later I was doing a
one-year certificate program in professional writing—and yes, some peers wrote of dressing like a "real" cowboy. Short hair was back in
style (Gay men had been first) and the most timid generation X’ers were
starting to wear bathing trunks like Grandpa’s, called “board shorts,” far down
their legs. Poor guys: They might as well walk with cold seaweed wrapped around their legs. At least the trunks were more colorful than Grandpa would have been
able to afford. This was on the prairies where no one had ever seen a surfboard in real life. One night, downtown at the
bar, one of my writing classmates told me she could always tell whether a boy
was wearing boxer style or jockey style. Oops! So maybe a decade earlier
females could tell I was being a nerd—Perish the thought! A week later,
chatting with three young gay males, I asked. One guy said he noticed, the
other two didn’t… Since then, by the way, my pretty forever-young classmate has
settled into granny style underwear.
As for me, I had never noticed: not
because I was a typical oblivious male, but because I was so uptight, if not
homophobic, and so I would have just died if anyone caught me looking… Yes, we
males have a lot of double standards. And liberation does not come handed on a silver platter.
I’m not the only one who’s uptight.
Recently, in this best of all centuries, I was inside an outdoors store buying some
of that newfangled sweat resistant Marino wool. Some of the long underwear was
looser, while some was snugger, for ice and rock climbing. As you know, for
snugger clothes in general, just as when you wear slim cowboy jeans for horseback
riding, the way to go is jockey style underwear. My young outdoors salesman,
leading me over to the briefs, was fine with boxer style, but made a screwed up
face at what he called the “grape smuggler” jockey style. “I’m a baby boomer,”
I said using my crotchety old man voice, so as not to sound like I was being
personally judgmental of the young man, “and that’s what I buy.” But wow, I
could sure tell he was uptight.
I daresay young women his age are
uptight too. My guess is that a young man of today doesn’t dare pull down
his wide pants on a lucky Friday night while wearing jockey style, lest the modern
lady laugh at him. Whatever happened to the younger generation’s revolution
against old age and being uptight? I wonder: Does this means the “women’s liberation” of my
youth was for naught? Did my generation endure protests, tear gas and
derisions, only for 21st century women to say, “I mostly believe in
equal rights, but not the goal of equality” or “I believe in equal
rights, but I’m not a feminist.”?
Well. I have it on good authority
that if you dare to dial up your light of consciousness, dare to see and know,
then you too will believe in feminism. Of course, who wants to endure a short
sharp knock, feeling shocked into being strident? It’s easier to only see the world dimly, easier to perceive
men’s underwear, and women’s corsets, as being totally devoid of any symbolism.
Sean Crawford
Forever in blue jeans,
Relaxed fit... but not high waist
March 2013
Footnote:
Incidentally, I essay about timidly deciding between boxer and jockey style bathing suits, in August 2012 archived as A Boomer Too Timid.
Sidebar:
I envision a man, like young John Kennedy, up on a soap box, giving a speech:
"There are those who say that women have had full and equal rights ever since back in the 20th century: I say, "Let them go to a lady with the credibility of being a rich successful capitalist.
"There are those who say we no longer need feminism: I say, 'Let them go to the fifth most powerful woman in the world, according to a Forbes list, Sheryl Sandberg.'
"There are those who say women in the working world are really, really close to equality—all they need to do is stay silent, keep their heads down, and pretend there's no need for feminism: I say, 'Let them go discover how Sandberg's book, subtitled "Women, Work and the Will to Lead," is NOT from the 1970's but from this year, 2013…' The title is Lean In.
(With help from Nell Scoval, her book is in plain English: The oodles of footnote-documents proving lack of equality are relegated to a separate back section.)
"Until all women, rich and poor, business and nonbusiness, have equal rights, "Ich bin ien feminist.""
Fashion trends have been changing at a faster rate than they used to in the past few decades. However it is really fascinating that the old fashion trends come back to existence after a significant time passes.
ReplyDeleteMy favorite decade is the 1950's. I think that since then fashions have yo-yoed to and from that decade.
ReplyDeleteAs for male swim suits, and gut feeling forcing men to wear a swatch of cold seaweed, perhaps the compromise, to avoid (non-speedo) jockey style, is to move to what girls call the French boy style, where there is snug fabric, not cold, on the hips.
I can remember when we moved from 1950's bikes to a silly fashion for small wheel bikes called mustangs (like in the movie E.T.) a fashion that could not be ended, not with any dignity, until folks moved to European 10-speeds.
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ReplyDeleteThank you Silken, I can go all day on a nice compliment.
ReplyDeleteit took a while to answer because:
I cannot comment on my own site, not even after allowing pop up ads and third party tracking.
There's a lesson here folks: go with WordPress, not Google's blogger (BlogSpot)
...I am writing this at the library.