Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumWhy Are We Still Talking About Hillary Clinton’s Clothes?
Why Are We Still Talking About Hillary Clintons Clothes?
When it was revealed this month that Hillary Clinton wore an Armani jacket that cost nearly $12,500 in April while giving a victory speech after the New York primary, mainstream media outlets and social media platforms alike lambasted her for it. Clintons clothing choice was presented across these medias as being a direct contradiction to her efforts in her speech to present herself as an everywoman. How can she possibly have empathy for the poor while making such a blatant display of conspicuous consumption, after all? (Conspicuously absent from all of this criticism was any mention of how much male politicians spend on their suits.) Her sartorial choice became a trending topic on Facebook and Twitter. Articles on sites from CNBC to the New York Post traced the development of her personal style from frumpy first lady to pant-suited Secretary of State to, most recently, lavishly adorned presidential candidate.
It was a debacle that exemplified how gender roles and expectations shape the lives of women in politicsand how the double-standards applied to them put their appearances, and not just their politics, in the national spotlight. Fashion choices undeniably play a role in political processes, as they do in many professional contexts. Research has shown that appearance plays a role in determining election outcomes, especially when combined with other factors such as race, gender and ethnicity. For women, the stakes are particularly highand unsurprisingly so, it is often women who face scrutiny for their appearances when taking the public stage.
Michelle Obama has been simultaneously lauded as the first lady of fashion and widely scorned for choosing to bare her (impeccably toned) arms. Sarah Palin was denounced as elitist by fellow Republicans when it was revealed that the Republican Party spent close to $150,000 on her campaign wardrobe. Hillary Clinton, after speaking in Bangladesh sans makeup and wearing glasses, was said by DailyMail to look tired and withdrawn, her lack of attention to appearance clearly evidencing her complete lack of desire to make another run at the presidency.
Meanwhile, it is hard to find entire posts dedicated to the fashion successes and faux-pas of men in the American political sphere. Perhaps the most controversial sartorial escapade of Obamas presidency was his daring choice to wear a tan suit to a press conference in 2014, which sparked many a lighthearted joke on Twitter. Clothing-related controversy around Trumps campaign has focused almost exclusively on whether or not his brands designer suits and ties are produced outside of the United States, rather than on the price of the suits he wears himself. Though significant Twitter debate arose over whether the suit Bernie Sanders wore at the March 9 Democratic debate was blue, brown, or black, his choice to make perceived anti-fashion statements by wearing ill-fitting clothing goes largely without criticism, seen as a sensible outcome of his choice to portray himself as a common man.
. . . .
Nearly 100 years after women won suffrage, were still waiting for those in the realm of politics to be judged not for the fabrics on their skin, but the content of their minds. In my opinion, a shift in this mindset would truly be the fairest of them all.
http://msmagazine.com/blog/2016/06/13/the-one-battle-female-politicians-just-cant-win/
guillaumeb
(42,641 posts)Talking about clothing is simple, reductionistic, misogynistic, and easy. Issues are harder. And this "issue" was the subject of a post on DU!?!
niyad
(113,253 posts)jacket. yes, here on DU.
Mika
(17,751 posts)During the primaries, one of the big guffaws was Bernie's rumpled suits and his hair.
Rendering this complaint null and void, as to dem candidates.
Kurovski
(34,655 posts)Count your sexist blessings.
PDittie
(8,322 posts)I'm only a little bothered by the fact that Armani can sell a a burlap sack with sleeves and extra glitter to Hillary Clinton for that amount of money. You know, questionable judgment.
But what REALLY bothers me is people who think Trump or any other man hasn't been critiqued in the same way by women for his hair, his suit, or his mild obesity.
http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopoly_fs/1.2663831.1465281162!/img/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/article_1200/meryl7n-6-web.jpg
(is two enough to avoid the alert?)
Wilms
(26,795 posts)How do you even begin to conflate the issues?
I know, I know....there's a war on women. Never mind the wars this woman promotes.