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1950s Fashion Essay

Decent Essays

Australia was a vibrant prosperous decade during the 1950’s, in contrast to the suffering and hardship, Australians underwent during the periods of WW2 and the Great Depression. Employment was high and technological advancements and improvements in transportation and communication transformed the lives of many Australians. Living standards and lifestyles were rapidly progressing. For women, it was a decade of great changes and continuities in the areas of fashion and work. Women became more conscious of their appearance so fashions shifted multiple times and teenagers began to have more influence on clothing trends. Furthermore, the desire for normality and consistency reinforced family-focused values and expectations around pleasing …show more content…

Throughout the decade both genders became much more fashion conscious and a woman’s appearance was often linked to the success of their husband. The daily reminder from radios, TV’s and magazines to be desirable and beautiful for their husbands motivated women to splash out and spend a lot of money on clothes.
1950’s society had strict expectations of gender roles and what a woman should be. It was a constricted and repressive decade, and the belief that a ‘woman’s place is in the home’ was strongly reflected in its attitudes towards women’s education, employment and religion. Right from birth, young girls were trained by school, church and popular magazines to accept this view without question. It was extremely unusual and frowned upon to see a woman in the workforce as most women married straight after high school and fell into their traditional roles of being a diligent homemaker, obedient wife and caring mother.
The role of women changed dramatically in the 1950s as only a decade prior, women were encouraged to move into the workforce to replace men’s job and give aid to injured soldiers. With the conclusion of World War II, governments and societies that just several years earlier had urged women to move into the paid workforce now proposed a different view of women’s role. Women had to give up their jobs to make way for the men they had replaced and return to life before the war. This was a difficult transition for women as many enjoyed the independence

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