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“She Wants To Wear Trousers, Maybe Even a Sabre And A Rifle Soon!” Reception of the trouser skirt in Slovenia in 1911


Author(s):Robert Devetak
Co-author(s):Borut Batagelj (ur.)
Leto:2023
Publisher(s):Zgodovinsko društvo Celje, Celje
Language(s):slovenščina
Type(s) of material:text
Rights:
CC license

This work by Robert Devetak is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

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Description
The article deals with the reception of the trouser skirt (Jupe-culotte) in Slovenia. It was a garment designed by the Frenchman Paul Poiret in 1911 and quickly spread from France to the rest of Europe. It was inspired by oriental culture and fashion and was particularly notable because it was one of the first visible and widespread examples of trousers worn by women. Reactions to the garment that shook women’s established dressing patterns differed across Europe and ranged from support to repulsion and attacks on women. The article will present in more detail how Slovenian society reacted to the new fashion, with a special emphasis on the connection between the phenomenon and the political situation and nationalism in the Slovenian environment.
Metadata (12)
  • identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/11686/58354
    • title
      • »Hlače hoče nositi, v kratkem morda celo sabljo in puško!« Recepcija hlačnega krila na Slovenskem v letu 1911
      • “She Wants To Wear Trousers, Maybe Even a Sabre And A Rifle Soon!” Reception of the trouser skirt in Slovenia in 1911
    • creator
      • Robert Devetak
    • contributor
      • Borut Batagelj (ur.)
    • subject
      • Jupe-Culotte
      • Paul Poiret
      • hlačno krilo
      • nacionalizem
      • ideološki boji
      • Jupe-Culotte
      • Paul Poiret
      • trouser skirt
      • nationalism
      • ideological struggles
    • description
      • The article deals with the reception of the trouser skirt (Jupe-culotte) in Slovenia. It was a garment designed by the Frenchman Paul Poiret in 1911 and quickly spread from France to the rest of Europe. It was inspired by oriental culture and fashion and was particularly notable because it was one of the first visible and widespread examples of trousers worn by women. Reactions to the garment that shook women’s established dressing patterns differed across Europe and ranged from support to repulsion and attacks on women. The article will present in more detail how Slovenian society reacted to the new fashion, with a special emphasis on the connection between the phenomenon and the political situation and nationalism in the Slovenian environment.
    • publisher
      • Zgodovinsko društvo Celje
    • date
      • 2023
      • 01. 01. 2023
    • type
      • besedilo
    • language
      • Slovenščina
    • isPartOf
    • rights
      • license: ccByNcSa