This is a tremendous and long article, published in the Stanford Report today, about Clelia Mosher, a researcher who studied menstruation, women's health, and Victorian women's attitudes about sex. What a delightful find.
‘The skirt, as modified by the vagaries of fashion, has a direct bearing on the health, development and efficiency of the woman. In 1893-96 I made a series of observations on the clothing of ninety-eight young women. The average width of skirt was then 13.5 feet. The weight of the skirt alone was often as much as the entire weight of the clothing worn by the modern girl.’
–Clelia Mosher, Strength of Women (c. 1920)
'She cut an odd figure on campus, Griego says, in her habitual "mannish suit." In her writings, Mosher railed against fashion: Sewing dainty clothing wasted women's study time; a young girl "making tatting to decorate her clothes or knitting or embroidering while her brother is playing ball" would grow feeble and sedentary.'
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
For the Love of Research and Women
Labels:
Clelia Mosher,
exercise,
medicine,
skirts,
Stanford,
women's health
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