Shame and Visibility
Shame is widely regarded as an awful feeling. It is usually characterized as an involuntary, negative, other‐mediated emotion about oneself, and differentiated from other uncomfortable self‐conscious emotions such as embarrassment by virtue of the fact that it involves a “negative global assessment” of oneself (Reference ManionManion 2003, 2). I may feel embarrassment if, for example, I discover that I have been walking around a public space with a trail of toilet‐paper attached to my shoe; I will feel silly, self‐conscious, and possibly a corresponding desire to hide from the view of others, but this experience is not shameful because it does not prompt me to reassess my overall self‐worth. Shame emerges from an appreciation of why another would perceive one as inferior or lowly, not merely ridiculous. It has a moral dimension, distinct from that associated with guilt, because it is concerned with the status of the self. The subject of guilt is conscious of how she may have harmed others, whereas the subject of shame is aware that her personal failings may be visible. Hence, the student caught cheating on an exam may undergo the shameful realization that others have now seen her bad traits (laziness, willingness to cheat, and so on).
Feminist scholars have, however, criticized traditional characterizations of shame as a discrete, punitive, emotional episode in a subject's history, such as that experienced by the student above, for failing to appreciate how it is possible to feel ashamed of what one is, as well as about what one does. The supposedly “universal” subject considered by traditional accounts of shame appears to be a socially privileged “male subject in disguise” (Reference BartkyBartky 1990, 84), who is accustomed to being “(in)visible.” Following Luna Dolezal, I take “(in)visibility” to designate the state that people generally strive to achieve in their social relations; that of being “visible” as a “full co‐subjectivity,” while also being “unremarkable… not judged or objectified” (Reference DolezalDolezal 2015, 81). Although socially privileged men are by no means immune to the experience of painful visibility we call shame, they do, seemingly, get to experience shame as a switch from (in)visibility to visibility. The situation is different for oppressed persons, who may only rarely experience the comfort of (in)visibility, and instead fluctuate between feeling painfully visible and feeling “invisible,” that is, “seen, but then seen through,” in the company of others (88). Oppressed persons, therefore, may also experience the chronic shame concomitant with the belief that one is not the “right” kind of person in the eyes of others.
If we accept that women's shame‐proneness is an important component of their continued oppression, then we can expect there to be some triggers of shame that are peculiar to women's experience. One reason why women appear to be particularly shame‐prone is because the feminine body, as Joanne Entwistle suggests, “is always, potentially at least, a sexual body” (Reference EntwistleEntwistle 2000, 38), which means that women are liable to become visible as sexual beings regardless, and often in spite, of their intentions. This strongly suggests that clothing could be an important trigger of shame for women, as it can fail them in ways it cannot fail men.Footnote 1 Although persons of all genders are likely to experience deep embarrassment if the seam at the back of their trousers bursts as they bend over before others, the aim of this musing is to show that women can also experience clothing as a source of shame for reasons that are peculiar to their gender. Women are, for instance, quite likely to experience as shameful revelations that they look “frumpy,” “manly,” or “tarty” in a certain outfit. What these states have in common is their relation to normative expectations regarding the management of women's bodies qua sexual bodies. A woman's realization that she appears frumpy or manly in a certain outfit can trigger shame—not merely embarrassment—because it signals not only an aesthetic shortcoming but also a personal failure to present oneself as a “proper”—that is, socially sanctioned—woman, since women in our society are praised for embodying the opposite traits: daintiness and femininity. Appearing tarty is often considered a moral failing for women, as the “loose” woman is presumed to lack self‐respect and to—indiscriminately—invite sexual advances. Thus a woman who realizes that she looks frumpy, manly, or tarty realizes that her clothes have exposed her as contemptible.
Despite being acknowledged as contributing to the specific—and, arguably, more pervasive (Reference BartkyBartky 1990)—character of shame in women's experience, women's dress is still relatively under‐critiqued as a source of shame. Although, initially, clothing might seem to lie at the trivial end of the spectrum of potential triggers for women's shame, as feminists, we ought to be wary of the received idea that concerns about women's attire are trivial, especially as even a cursory glance at the role of women's clothing in our society supplies evidence to the contrary. We live in a world in which women's careers can be tarnished, destroyed, and—occasionally—made as a consequence of “wardrobe malfunctions,” and media coverage of what our female politicians do and say is frequently eclipsed by analyses of what they wear. This state of affairs gives rise to the following question: Why do women's clothed bodies appear to be much more visible than men's? Though it would be impossible to provide a satisfactory, or even adequate, response to this question here, I aim to gesture toward a response that suggests that women's clothed bodies are not, in themselves, more visible than men's, but that women's clothes are frequently taken to make visible something politically significant about them, in a way that men's are not.Footnote 2 In order to make such a gesture, I shall focus on the pantsuit; first of all because, in the wake of Pantsuit Nation,Footnote 3 this outfit calls for more critical attention. Second, because I have a strong suspicion that one reason why many professional women have embraced the pantsuit is because it might have the potential to limit the meanings that may be read into women's bodies, meanings that can distract others from attending to the meanings women actually want to convey, and that often represent a source of shame for women.
Power‐Dressing and the Pantsuit
Professional and business workplaces have traditionally been male domains, and they are also spaces where sexuality is generally deemed inappropriate (with the obvious exception of the sex industry). Thus, dressing for work presents women—whose bodies are routinely sexualized in Western culture—with a serious challenge; they must “‘manage’ or at least limit the potential sexuality of their bodies” (Reference EntwistleEntwistle 2000, 32).
“Power‐dressing,” a trend that began in the late 1970s in the United States, advertised itself as a solution to precisely this challenge. It differs from its male counterpart—“dressing for success”—in its acknowledgment of women's sexuality as a “major obstacle” to their career progression (Reference EntwistleEntwistle 2000, 188). Power‐dressing manuals promise to offer the career woman a means of taking some control over her body and its social meanings. They attempt to guide women on how to avoid a plethora of potentially career‐damaging wardrobe errors, which include: wearing clothes that are provocative, which makes women workers visible as sex objects; dressing in a manner that is too feminine and, therefore, unprofessional, which renders women invisible in the workplace; and appearing too masculine, which supposedly makes women appear threatening in the eyes of their male colleagues. Power‐dressing manuals almost unanimously recommended the skirted suit for the career woman, as a costume that protects her from seeming shamefully out of place in the workplace by sending the right message: “I am a business woman, not an imitation man; but while we are working please treat me simply as a colleague” (Reference Kidwell and SteeleKidwell and Steele 1989, 87).
Although the skirted suit remains a popular choice for professional women, the pantsuit has enjoyed a revival in recent years. Though once a popular choice for working women in the early 1970s, the pantsuit fell out of favor because “many women found that colleagues and clients still regarded trousers as masculine,” and women wearing pantsuits to work were deemed to be taking a “risk” if they were doing business with men (Reference Kidwell and SteeleKidwell and Steele 1989, 87). Might the return of the pantsuit signal a shift in how the feminine body is constituted in relation to structures of shame? The growing preference for pantsuits among professional women can be viewed as a result of the progress made toward greater gender equality in the professional sphere in the last couple of decades, which has reduced the pressure placed upon women to kowtow to the needs of their male colleagues, at the expense of their own comfort and convenience. Indeed, the patriarchal prohibition on women wearing pantsuitsFootnote 4 may be a factor in their renewed appeal. By protecting women from the kinds of shame that more traditional women's clothing could still subject them to in the workplace—that of being visible, for example, as sex objects, on the one hand, or being regarded as frivolous/unprofessional and thus invisible, on the other—and by also representing a refusal to prioritize the needs of male colleagues above their own, in a way that the skirted suit does not, the pantsuit holds the promise of bodily (in)visibility for women in the workplace today. It could—potentially—render their bodies neutral, unremarkable, and (in)visible, like men's. However, there is a possibility that the pantsuit is booby‐trapped and that, rather than providing women with a means of achieving (in)visibility, it exposes them to another species of shameful visibility.
The Covert Function of the Suit
In a well‐known essay, “The Suit and the Photograph,” John Berger explores the symbolic function of the suit by analyzing three photographs of suited men taken by August Sander: one of three peasant men walking to a dance in 1914; a group portrait of an all‐male village band, taken in 1913; and another of four Protestant missionaries in 1931. Berger observes that even if one covers the faces of the men in the first two photographs and surveys only their clothed bodies, the notion that these bodies could belong to members of the ruling or the middle class appears preposterous. One might presume that the social class of these men would not be discernible from an examination of their clothed bodies, but the suits of these men emphasize their class rather than disguising it, or even elevating them above it. Berger contends that the suits in these photographs lend an absurdity to the bodies they adorn, making them seem “coarse, clumsy, brute‐like” (Reference Berger, Mukerji and SchudsonBerger 1980/1991, 427). The tailored clothes of the four missionaries, however, appear to enhance their physical dignity, rather than diminish it.
In his attempt to explain how the function of the suit could vary in accordance with the class of its wearer, Berger reminds us that it was originally developed as a ruling‐class uniform that idealized “purely sedentary power” (Reference Berger, Mukerji and SchudsonBerger 1980/1991, 430). Although its original function may have been to dissolve differences between members of the upper class, once persons from outside the ruling elite adopted it as their uniform too, its function evolved, in Berger's view. Its original and overt function remained intact, but it developed another, covert function: class hegemony. By wearing suits, working‐class men permitted others to judge them by the ruling class's standards “of chic and sartorial worthiness,” which “condemned them… to being always, and recognizably to the classes above them, second‐rate, clumsy, uncouth, defensive” (431). Therefore, working‐class men's adoption of the suit—a costume ill‐suited to both their physiques and their everyday activities—made them visible as imposters. If Berger's analysis is correct, it sheds some light on the question of why the suit may not assist everyone in the struggle for (in)visibility.
Although women have fought for their right to wear the pantsuit, one only has to look to the recent media treatment of Hillary Clinton to see that this outfit may not secure bodily (in)visibility for women. Clinton was the first First Lady to wear pants in an official White House portrait (Reference Lerman‐GolombLerman-Golomb 2016), and her continued commitment to the pantsuit has been celebrated. And, though unsuccessful in her quest to become the first female leader of the United States, she was heralded as the leader of “Pantsuit Nation.” Nevertheless, throughout her presidential campaign, Clinton's clothed body was often deemed more noteworthy than what she had to say. Moreover, her decision to continually wear pantsuits seems to have made it easier for her opponents to shame her as an unfeminine, cold‐hearted, “nasty woman” (Reference WoolfWoolf 2016).
In light of Berger's exposition of the suit as a class marker, one cannot help but wonder whether women have fallen into the same trap as working‐class men in their attempt to mimic patriarchal dress. By embracing the pantsuit, have women succumbed to sexual class hegemony? To respond to this question, we need be clearer about who and what determines the function of the pantsuit.
Recovering Our Pantsuits?
As shame is an other‐mediated emotion, it will be contended that if the pantsuit fails to render women's bodies (in)visible, then this is primarily because women ritually shame other women on account of what they wear. But this is of little consequence since it has been shown that part of the functioning of modern patriarchal power is that it allows men to “get off scot‐free” (Reference BartkyBartky 1990, 80); because women have internalized the male gaze, they can assume the role of oppressors and oppressed simultaneously. Thus, the fact that it tends to be women who are most critical of other women's clothes does not disprove the idea that the norms and expectations surrounding women's dress contribute to women's specific shame‐proneness and play a significant role in their continued oppression.
In her investigation into how women's (male) self‐surveillance affects their relationship with clothes, Iris Marion Young seeks to determine whether there is a way of extracting the male gaze from the equation. Drawing upon the Irigarayan insight that when women get together to select, shop for, and share clothes, they “might speak different relationships” (Reference YoungYoung 2005, 68), Young recommends touch, female bonding, and fantasy as potential avenues for women who strive to read their own meanings into their clothes. Yet she concludes that it may be impossible “to extricate the liberating and valuable in women's experience of clothes from the exploitative and oppressive” (74). Indeed, it seems as though any resulting gains in pleasure and confidence achieved by a woman who takes Young's advice are likely to be lost as soon as she steps out of the society of her sisters into the world of patriarchal norms and values, where her clothed body is always a potential source of shame because it is the patriarchal Other, not she, who has most control over its meanings.
What is interesting about the pantsuit, though, is that it is an outfit that has not, historically, met with approval under the male gaze. It has even been suggested that the fact that pantsuits are simply called “suits” when worn by men, but “(pant)suits” when worn by women, indicates that many people in our society are still uncomfortable with women wearing trousers (Reference Lerman‐GolombLerman-Golomb 2016). There may be something in this. If the prefix “pant” is taken to define her suit in relation to his, then the pantsuit‐clad woman appears to be a deviation from the norm. Understanding the pantsuit as the “female equivalent” of the (male) suit requires the acceptance of a system of capitalist, patriarchal norms, within which the covert function of the suit (social/sexual class hegemony) remains in play. However, if the pantsuit is understood as a female costume whose overt function is the transgression of patriarchal norms, then the covert function of the suit is deactivated, as the pantsuit first of all symbolizes the rejection of a system of values that would mark women (and working‐class men) in suits as imposters. Under the latter interpretation, it would seem that, even if the pantsuit cannot (yet) guarantee bodily (in)visibility for women, it does offer them the rare opportunity to make their own meanings through clothing because it defies interpretation under the male gaze.
Although, currently, both the above interpretations of the pantsuit coexist, a deeper understanding of the transgressive potential of the pantsuit will, hopefully, allow women to wear this outfit on their own terms, if they choose to wear it.