Byxan och (polis)kvinnan

Visuella nedslag i polisuniformens genushistoria

Authors

  • Ann Kroon Uppsala universitet

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54807/kp.v16.28654

Keywords:

police uniforms, trousers, body, gender, visual analysis, gendering

Abstract

This article concerns the gendered history of women's police uniforms. In Sweden, the first police women "on the beat" in the 1950s had to wear culottes instead of proper trousers, while today all police uniforms are gender neutral. Tracing the historic symbolism of "phallic trousers" as belonging only to men, and how they gradually became introduced as a garment also for women, it is argued that trousers can be used as a material and visual point of reference, through which it is possible to analyse some important social changes regarding gender throughout the 20th century. Overall, the article purports the idea that when trousers gradually were introduced as an item of cothing to (most) women, this was implicitly accompanied by an increased attention to the body as marker of gender.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Ann Kroon, Uppsala universitet

Ann Kroon disputerade i sociologi vid Uppsala universitet i april 2007 på avhandlingen FE/MALE asymmetries of gender and sexuality. Hon utvecklar just nu forskningsidéer med sociologisk inriktning på materiella och visuella studier.

Downloads

Published

2007-09-01

How to Cite

Kroon, A. (2007). Byxan och (polis)kvinnan: Visuella nedslag i polisuniformens genushistoria. Kulturella Perspektiv – Svensk Etnologisk Tidskrift, 16(3), 11–20. https://doi.org/10.54807/kp.v16.28654