4.3 Article

Sized Out: Women, Clothing Size, and Inequality

Journal

GENDER & SOCIETY
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages 180-203

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0891243218756010

Keywords

gender; the body; embodiment; fashion industry; clothing size; floating signifiers

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Feminist scholars have long critiqued the fashion industry's ultra-thin beauty standards as harmful to women. Combining data from three qualitative studies of women's clothing retailersof bras, plus-size clothing, and bridal wearwe shift the analytical focus away from glamorized media images toward the seemingly mundane realm of clothing size standards, examining how women encounter, understand, and navigate these standards in their daily lives. We conceptualize clothing size standards as floating signifiers, given their lack of consistency within and across brands and the extent to which women engage in identity work and body work in relation to them. Our findings indicate that the instability of these unregulated standards allows some womenparticularly those with bodies located closest to the boundaries between size categoriesto claim conformity to body ideals and to access some of the associated psychological, social, and material privileges. However, even as individual women may benefit by distancing themselves from stigmatized size categories, this pattern renders women's body acceptance tenuous while simultaneously reinforcing hierarchies among women based on body size and shape.

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