The Threads of History
For centuries, people crossed the boundaries of gendered dress for work, travel, theater, military service, survival, and sometimes simple practicality. So when did clothing become something the police could regulate? In this episode of The Threads of History, Theodore Alexander explores the surprising history of cross-dressing laws, anti-masquerade ordinances, Victorian anxieties about public order, and the long struggle over who was allowed to wear what in public. From women seeking permission to wear trousers in France to American ordinances that criminalized appearing in clothing "not belonging" to one's sex, this is the story of how appearance became evidence and why governments became so interested in policing it. Along the way, we'll encounter Shakespearean theater, carnival traditions, bloomers, Hollywood rebels, and the gradual collapse of rules that once seemed unquestionable. Because history suggests that clothing is never just clothing. It's a way societies decide who belongs, who doesn't, and who gets to move freely between worlds.
25 episodes
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