If a woman in the 1920s was considered a "new woman" decades later for wearing risqué dresses revealing sexy ankles, imagine what the women during present times will be considered in a few more decades. Will we be deemed as "newer women" for wearing leggings, v-neck shirts, and pencil skirts that are now deserving the name not because they are as straight as a pencil, but because they are the length of a pencil? Eh, probably.
People need to get over their fears of human anatomy. Women have curves--this is fact. You can cover her figure with as much fabric as you would like, though taking this precaution does not make her figure dissapear. She is there. Her shape is there. And you are there judging her for the body granted to her for having an extra x - chromosome. Only babies believe what they can't see does not exist. Stop being babies.
What causes distress and jostles society is how a woman portrays these natural curves. You act like it is such a surprise when a women wears tighter clothing, and curves are visible. Shock. Tragedy strikes! You can continue to pretend the world never knew of such information as a curve. She reveals a secret suppressed by fabric for decades. She is deemed a slut. Yes, s-l-u-t. Shun me because you are afraid of not only a woman's figure, but also a word. Letters are daggers. Watch out before they get you, too.
Slowly but surely, women's fashion inches closer and closer to the beginning of man, before Adam and Eve ate the Fruit of Sin, when clothes were a faint idea in the far away distance. When the "newest women" make history books for wearing nothing but the skin on their skeleton, society will--surprise--go berzerk. What has changed from the times both men and women of all ages strutted around the cave show-casing everything for everyone to see is not women's fashion. What has changed is the society itself that judges women's fashion. How can one civilization never think twice about revealing the human figure, yet a society we like to call "advanced" cares almost too much about what we show and what we don't?
Wow, this did a great job of shedding light on how odd and somewhat pointless our societal conventions really are. Great use of sarcasm with the "a society we like to call 'advanced' cares almost too much about about what we show..."!
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