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Revision as of 08:12, 29 November 2010

Two Tahitian Women, (1899), by Paul Gauguin
This article deals with topless females. For males, see Barechestedness.

Toplessness is the state in which a female has her breasts uncovered, with her areolae and nipples visible, usually in a public space. The adjective topless may refer to a woman who appears in public, poses, or performs with her breasts exposed (a "topless model"); to an activity or performance that involves exposing the breasts ("topless sunbathing"; "topless dancing"); to an artistic, photographic, or cinematic representation of a woman with her breasts uncovered (a "topless photograph"); to a place where female toplessness is tolerated or expected (a "topless beach"; a "topless bar"); or to a garment designed to reveal the breasts and the nipples (a "topless swimsuit").

In society

Two Wichita Native Americans in summer dress. Photographed by William S. Soule, 1870
Two bathing Indonesian women, c. 1950

In many societies today, concealment of the lower portion of the breasts, including the nipples and areolae, is a cultural norm of female modesty from adolescence onward. However, considerable variance has existed in attitudes toward toplessness, both across cultures and through history.

Traditional cultures of North America, Africa, Australia and the Pacific Islands considered female toplessness normal and acceptable, at least until the arrival of Christian missionaries,[1] and it continues to be the norm in many indigenous cultures today.

Toplessness was also the norm in various Asian cultures before Muslim expansion in the 13th and 14th centuries.[2] Not only fully clothed attire but topless attire was found widely among Indian women before Muslim conquest of India.[3][4] Female toplessness had been the norm in Southern India in medieval age.[5] Several peoples of South India like Tamils along the Coromandel coast, Tiyan and other peoples on the Malabar coast, Kadar of Cochin island, Toda, Nayar, Cheruman (Pulayar), Kuruba, Koraga, Nicobarese, Uriya adopted topless attire for women until the 19th century or early 20th century.[3]
Thai Cultural Mandates issued in 1939 and Western writing[6] prove Thai women would go clothed fully or topless in public before the westernization of dress.

In the late 19th century the influence of missionaries and modernization under King Chulalongkorn encouraged local women to wear blouses to cover their breasts.

Until the early 20th century, women from northern Thailand wore a long tube-skirt (Pha-Sin), tied high above their waist and below their breasts, which were uncovered.[7]

In 1858 Henri Mouhot took the picture of Laos women in which virgins clothed their breasts, while the married women revealed both breasts in public as the function of breast-feed was attached to their breasts.

Toplessness had been the norm among Dayak people, Javanese people, Balinese people at Indonesia before being affected by the culture of Islam and the West. In the Javanese and Balinese society, toplessness had been limited to the women to work comfortably or rest. In the Dayak society, only the sagged or big breasted women among the married covered breasts which can disturb them in their work.[3]
In most Middle Eastern countries, toplessness has not been socially accepted since at least the early beginning of Islam (7th century), because of Islamic standards for female modesty. However, toplessness was the norm in earlier cultures within Arabia, Egypt, Assyria and Mesopotamia. Tunisia and Egypt are an exception among Arabic states, allowing foreign tourists to swim topless on private beaches.[8] In Himba society of northern Namibia, the social norm is for women to be bare breasted.

History

Agnès Sorel, known to appear topless in the French court, was the model for Virgin and Child Surrounded by Angels, by Jean Fouquet (c.1450)

In many European societies between the Renaissance and the 19th century, exposed breasts were more acceptable than it is today, since a woman's bared legs, ankles, or shoulders were considered to be more risqué than her exposed breasts.[9]

In aristocratic and upper-class circles the display of breasts was at times regarded as a status symbol, as a sign of beauty, wealth or social position. To maintain youthful-looking bosoms women could employ wet nurses to breastfeed their children.[10] The bared breast even invoked associations with nude sculptures of classical Greece that were exerting an influence on art, sculpture, and architecture of the period.[11]

Breast-baring female fashions have been traced to 15th-century courtesan Agnès Sorel, mistress to Charles VII of France, whose gowns in the French court sometimes exposed one or both of her breasts. (Jean Fouquet's portrayal of the Virgin Mary with her left breast uncovered is believed to have taken Sorel as a model.) Aristocratic women sought to immortalise their breasts in paint, as in the case of Simonetta Vespucci, whose portrait with exposed breasts was painted by Piero di Cosimo in c.1480. During the 16th century, women's fashions displaying their breasts were common in society, from Queens to common prostitutes, and emulated by all classes.[12]

Similar fashions became popular in England during the 17th century when they were worn by Queen Mary II and by Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I of England, for whom architect Inigo Jones designed a masque costume that fully revealed both of her breasts.[11]

From the Victorian period onward, however, social attitudes shifted to mandate the concealment of women's breasts. Although a degree of liberalization took place in the later 20th century, contemporary Western societies still generally take a somewhat unfavorable view of toplessness, with the very term "topless" often carrying the connotation of sexual licentiousness or deliberate defiance of cultural taboo.

Contemporary view

In contemporary society, the extent to which a woman may expose her breasts depends on social and cultural context. Women's swimsuits and bikinis commonly reveal the tops and sides of the breasts. Displaying cleavage is considered permissible in many settings, and is even a sign of elegance and sophistication on many formal social occasions, but it may be prohibited by dress codes in settings such as workplaces and schools, where sexualized displays of the female breast may be considered inappropriate. Showing the nipples or areolae is almost always considered partial nudity and sex appealing. Women and girls may consider toplessness acceptable in gender segregated areas such as changing rooms and dormitories, and toplessness may be permitted in specific mixed-gender zones such as topless beaches (see below), but full breast exposure outside of these contexts is mostly confined to occasional acts of exhibitionism or protest.

During a short period in 1964, "topless" dress designs appeared at fashion shows, but those who wore the dresses in public found themselves arrested on indecency charges.[13] However, toplessness has come to feature in contemporary haute couture fashion shows.

Some cultures have even begun to apply the social interdiction on female toplessness to prepubescent and even infant girls, who may be dressed by their parents in bikinis or one-piece swimsuits on beaches and at water parks. This trend toward covering the female nipple from infancy onward is particularly noticeable in the United States and the Middle East, but is much less common in Europe[14] and Latin America.[citation needed]

Legality

File:Breasts-not-bombs.jpg
An anti-war demonstration in Washington, D.C., 24 September 2005

Legally, many Western jurisdictions consider the public display of women's breasts to be indecent exposure. However, the activist topfreedom movement has been successful in some instances in persuading courts to overturn such laws on the basis of sex discrimination, arguing that a woman should be free to expose her chest in any context in which a man can expose his. Successful cases include the District of Columbia 1986, New York State 1992, Columbus, OH 1995, Ontario Canada 1996, Moscow Idaho 1998, and Maine 1998.[15]

Many jurisdictions permit public breastfeeding.[16] In the United States, for instance, a federal law enacted in 1999[17] specifically provides that "a woman may breastfeed her child at any location in a Federal building or on Federal property, if the woman and her child are otherwise authorized to be present at the location."

In March 2008, after a year-long campaign by a pressure group, the Topless Front, Copenhagen's Culture and Leisure Committee voted to approve topless bathing by women.[18] Also in 2008, the city council in Vancouver, British Columbia, location of the World Naked Bike Ride, gave women the right to go topless in public, not solely at swimming pools and beaches.[19]

In 2009, women in Malmö, Sweden won the right to swim topless in public swimming pools[20] when the City Council voted unanimously to approve the action.[21] "We don’t decide what men should do with their torso, why then do women have to listen to the men. Moreover, many men have larger breasts than women", said a council spokesman.[22]

In many indigenous, non-Western cultures it is completely acceptable for both men and women torsos to be unclothed. Female toplessness can also constitute an important aspect of indigenous cultural celebrations. However, this can lead to cross-cultural and legal conflict. During 2004, Australian police banned members of the Papunya community from using a public park in the city of Alice Springs to practice a traditional Aboriginal dance that included topless women.[23]

GoTopless.org, a US organization, claims that women have the same constitutional right to be bare chested in public places as men. They further claim constitutional equality between men and women on being topless in public. In 2009, they used August 26, (Women's Equality Day) as a day of national protest.[24]

Topless beaches

File:Topless women on the beach.jpg
Women posing for a camera on beach in Saint Martin

In 1964, fashion designer Rudi Gernreich designed the first topless swimsuit, which he called the "monokini" in the US.[25] The design was first printed by Look magazine.[26] Gernreich's monokini looked like a one-piece swimsuit suspended from two halter straps in the cleavage of bared breasts. It had only two small straps over the shoulders, leaving the breasts bare. Despite the reaction of fashion critics and church officials, shoppers purchased the monokini in record numbers that summer, though very few monokinis were ever worn in public. By the end of the season, Gernreich had sold 3000 swimsuits at $24 a piece, which meant a tidy profit for such a minuscule amount of fabric.[27] The novelty of the design caught significant attention, and San Francisco Chronicle featured a woman in a monokini with her exposed breasts clearly visible on its first page.[28] A photograph of Peggy Moffitt, the famous model for the suit, appeared in Women's Wear Daily, Life and numerous other publications.[29]

A topless sunbather in Palm Springs, California.

The topless swimsuit was not very successful in the USA, where people have never accepted it for the beach.[30] The Soviet government called it "barbarism" and a sign of social "decay". The pope called it immoral. The New York City Police Department was strictly instructed to arrest any woman wearing a swimsuit by the commissioner of parks.[28] In Chicago, a 19-year-old female beachgoer was fined US$100 for wearing a topless swimsuit on a public beach.[28] Copious coverage of the event helped to send the image of exposed breasts across the world. Women's clubs and the church were particularly active in their condemnation. In Italy and Spain, the church warned against the topless fashion.[31] Even in Saint-Tropez, French Riviera, it was banned.[28] Jean-Luc Godard, a founding mover of French New Wave cinema, incorporated a topless swimsuit footage shot in Riviera into his film A Married Woman, but it was edited out by the censors.[32]

Original design of the monokini by Rudi Gernreich.

In the mid-1960s, led by movie starlets and models in Cannes and Saint-Tropez, women began to remove their bikini tops while sunbathing on the beaches of the French Riviera. The practice slowly spread to other Western countries, many of which now allow topless sunbathing on some or all of their beaches, either through legal statute or by custom. A topless beach differs from a nude beach or naturist beach in that beach goers of both sexes are required to keep their genital area covered, although females have the option to remove their tops without fearing legal prosecution or official harassment. Women who sunbathe topless do not necessarily consider themselves to be nudists.

Topless Swimmer at Devon Beach

Beaches permitting topless swimming and sunbathing became common in Europe and Australia, where the practice mostly became uncontroversial. By the mid-1990s, Australian researchers found that 88 percent of Australian university students, of both genders, considered it socially acceptable for women to remove their tops on public beaches, even though the majority disapproved of women exposing their breasts in other contexts, such as public parks.[33] However, media reports in recent years note that the number of women sunbathing topless on French beaches has markedly declined, and that younger French women have become more disapproving of public breast exposure.[34] In parts of Europe, for example in Sweden, toplessness is unpopular and uncommon.[35]

In the United States, which is generally less tolerant of female toplessness than Europe or Australia, toplessness by women is permitted wherever a man is permitted to go without a top in Washington, D.C., New York, Hawaii, Maine, Ohio and Texas.[36][37] However, women in Texas appearing topless in public can be charged under public nuisance laws,[38] with the exception of Austin, the state capital, where some women sunbathing topless in Zilker Park, at various festivals, and at Hippie Hollow. Topless bathing is permitted on designated public nude beaches.

Mythology

A "Snake Goddess" statuette of ancient Minoan Civilization, c. 1600 BC.

In European pre-historic societies, sculptures of female figures with pronounced or highly exaggerated breasts were common. A typical example is the so-called Venus of Willendorf, one of many Paleolithic Venus figurines with ample hips and bosom. Artifacts such as bowls, rock carvings and sacred statues with breasts have been recorded from 15,000 BC up to late antiquity all across Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. Many female deities representing love and fertility were associated with breasts and breast milk. Figures of the Phoenician goddess Astarte were represented as pillars studded with breasts. Isis, an Egyptian goddess who represented, among many other things, ideal motherhood, was often portrayed as suckling pharaohs, thereby confirming their divine status as rulers. Even certain male deities representing regeneration and fertility were occasionally depicted with breast-like appendices, such as the river god Hapy who was considered to be responsible for the annual overflowing of the Nile. Female breasts were also prominent in the Minoan civilization in the form of the famous Snake Goddess statuettes. In Ancient Greece there were several cults worshipping the "Kourotrophos", the suckling mother, represented by goddesses such as Gaia, Hera and Artemis. The worship of deities symbolized by the female breast in Greece became less common during the first millennium. The popular adoration of female goddesses decreased significantly during the rise of the Greek city states, a legacy which was passed on to the later Roman Empire.[39]

During the middle of the first millennium BC, Greek culture experienced a gradual change in the perception of female breasts. Women in art were covered in clothing from the neck down, including female goddesses like Athena, the patron of Athens who represented heroic endeavor. There were exceptions: Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was more frequently portrayed fully nude, though in postures that were intended to portray shyness or modesty, a portrayal that has been compared to modern pin ups by historian Marilyn Yalom.[40] Although nude men were depicted standing upright, most depictions of female nudity in Greek art occurred "usually with drapery near at hand and with a forward-bending, self-protecting posture".[41] A popular legend at the time was of the Amazons, a tribe of fierce female warriors who socialized with men only for procreation and even removed one breast to become better warriors. The legend was a popular motif in art during Greek and Roman antiquity and served as an antithetical cautionary tale.

Art

In many European societies as a result of the Renaissance many artists were strongly influenced by classical Greek styles and culture.[11] As a result, images of nude and semi-nude subjects in many forms proliferated in art and sculpture.

During the Victorian era, French Orientalist painters such as Jean-Léon Gérôme presented an idealized depiction of female toplessness in Muslim harem baths,[42] while Eugène Delacroix, a French romantic artist, invoked images of liberty as a topless woman.

From the mid-19th century onward, there was a shift in social attitudes in the West, especially in the United States, towards the prohibition of the exposure of women's breasts. This has been reflected to a more limited degree in the arts.
The artifacts in the Ancient City Museum located in the neighbourhood of Bangkok depict Thai women topless. The Ramakien Mural representing an epic and lives of the Thais found at the Wat Phra Kaew Temple show Thai women with their breasts uncovered, wearing only a skirt in public.

Entertainment and media

Joséphine Baker topless

In the 1930s, the Hays Code brought an end to nudity in all its forms, including toplessness, in Hollywood films. Social and official attitudes have eased since those days and women now appear topless in mainstream cinema, although usually somewhat briefly. A notable exception was Rapa Nui which featured repeated scenes of bare-breasted native women. Film critic Roger Ebert said the producers got away with ongoing toplessness because of the women's brown skin:

Rapa Nui slips through the National Geographic Loophole. This is the Hollywood convention which teaches us that brown breasts are not as sinful as white ones, and so while it may be evil to gaze upon a blond Playboy centerfold and feel lust in our hearts, it is educational to watch Polynesian maidens frolicking topless in the surf. This isn't sex; it's geography.[43]

Some prominent actresses have used body doubles to avoid exposing their own breasts on film.[44][45] However, the French have traditionally been more relaxed with toplessness and they continued to use topless dancers and actresses during the 1910s and beyond in musical theater and cinema. Toplessness as a form of entertainment has survived to this day at the Folies Bergère and the Moulin Rouge.

In many Western cultures today, women are regularly featured topless in magazines, calendars, and other print media. In the United Kingdom, following a tradition established by the British newspaper The Sun in 1970, several mainstream tabloid newspapers feature topless female models on their third page, known as Page Three girls. Although images of topless women are increasingly prevalent in Western magazines and film, images of topless girls under the age of eighteen years are controversial, and are potentially considered child pornography in some jurisdictions. Photographers such as Jock Sturges and Bill Henson, whose work regularly depicts topless and naked adolescent girls, have been prosecuted or been embroiled in controversy because of these images.[46] Even insinuated toplessness by minors can cause controversy.

Women are also at times employed in adult-only venues to perform or pose topless in forms of commercial erotic entertainment. Such venues can range from downmarket strip clubs to upmarket cabarets, such as the Moulin Rouge. Topless entertainment may also include competitions such as wet T-shirt contests in which women display their breasts through translucent wet fabric—and may end up removing their T-shirts in front of the audience.

Female toplessness has also become a feature of carnivals such as Mardi Gras, notably in New Orleans,[47] during which women "flash" (briefly expose) their breasts in return for strings of plastic beads,[48] and Carnaval of Rio de Janeiro where floats occasionally feature topless women.[49]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Nida, Eugene A. (1954). "Customs and Cultures, Anthropology for Christian Missions". New York: Harper & Brothers.
  2. ^ Fernando, Romesh (15 November 1992). "The Garb of Innocence: A Time of Toplessness". Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  3. ^ a b c Hans Peter Duerr. "Der Mythos vom Zivilisationsprozeß 4. Der erotische Leib"
  4. ^ A. L. Bhasham. "The Wonder That Was India"
  5. ^ BBC Documentary. "The story of India"
  6. ^ M. Smith. Physician at the Court of Siam (1947) p.79 cited in Note 3 of Chapter: Southeast Asia in "Der erotische Leib"
  7. ^ "Traditional Dress in Chiang Mai".
  8. ^ Rovere, Elizabeth. "Culture and Tradition in the Arab Countries: American Returns Touched by the Land and the People". The Habiba Chaouch Foundation.
  9. ^ C. Willett and Phillis Cunnington, The History of Underclothes. London: Faber & Faber, 1981. ISBN 978-0-486-27124-8.
  10. ^ "French Caricature". University of Virginia Health System. Retrieved 2010-01-13.
  11. ^ a b c Lucy Gent and Nigel Llewellyn, eds., Renaissance Bodies: The Human Figure in English Culture c. 1540–1660. London: Reaktion Books, 1990.
  12. ^ "Historian Reveals Janet Jackson's 'Accidental' Exposing of Her Breast was the Height of Fashion in the 1600s". University of Warwick. May 5, 2004. Archived from the original on August 3, 2004.
  13. ^ "Sixties City – Bringing on back the good times". {{cite web}}: Text "accessdate-1-14-2010" ignored (help)
  14. ^ Allen, Anita L. (2006). "Disrobed: The Constitution of Modesty". HeinOnline. Retrieved 11 September 2009. American laws compel sexually modest behavior... By contrast to Western Europe, topless sunbathing is rarely permitted in the United States.
  15. ^ "10 successful court cases". Gotopless.org. Retrieved 26 August 2009. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |trans_title=, |month=, and |coauthors= (help)
  16. ^ Wiehl, Lis (2006-06-22). "Indecent Exposure". FOXNews.com.
  17. ^ "Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 2000". Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  18. ^ "Victory for topless bathers". London: TheSun.com. 2008-03-29. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
  19. ^ "Is nudity the new normal?". TheSun.com. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
  20. ^ "Malmö win for topless Swedish bathers - The Local". Thelocal.se. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  21. ^ "Women fight for right to bare breasts - The Local". Thelocal.se. March 29, 2008. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
  22. ^ "Swedish city legalizes topless bathing....at public swimming pools". Inquisitr.com. 2009-06-27. Retrieved 2009-07-23.
  23. ^ "Aborigines' fury over topless ban". BBC NEWS. 27 February 2004.
  24. ^ "National GoTopless Protest day". Gotopless.org. Retrieved 26 August 2009. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |trans_title=, |month=, and |coauthors= (help)
  25. ^ "bio...Rudi Gernreich" (in German). Retrieved 2010-01-14. [dead link]
  26. ^ Shteir, Rachel (2004). Striptease. Oxford University Press. pp. 318–321. ISBN 0195127501.
  27. ^ "Bikini Styles: Monokini". Everything Bikini. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  28. ^ a b c d David Smith Allyn, Make love, not war, pages 23–29, Taylor & Francis, 2001, ISBN 0-415-92942-3
  29. ^ Walls, Jeannette (1991-01-14). High Fashion's Lowest Neckline. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  30. ^ Menkes, Suzy (1993-07-18). "Runways: Remembrance of Thongs Past". The New York Times.
  31. ^ Thesander, Marianne (1997). "The Feminine Ideal". Reaktion Books. p. 187. ISBN 1861890044. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  32. ^ Monaco, James (2003). "The New Wave". UNET 2 Corporation. p. 157. ISBN 0970703953. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  33. ^ Herold, E.S. (1994). "Psychosocial aspects of female topless behavior on Australian beaches". Journal of Sex Research. Corbesi, B., & Collins, J.: 133–142. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |vol= ignored (|volume= suggested) (help)
  34. ^ Crumley, Bruce (30 July 2009). "In France, a New Generation of Women Says Non to Topless Sunbathing". Time. Retrieved 2010-01-23.
  35. ^ "Topless är botten". Aftonbladet. Retrieved 2010-11-20.
  36. ^ Wiehl, Lis (2006-06-22). "Indecent Exposure". Fox News. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  37. ^ "GoTopless: 10 successful cases giving women the right to be topless in certain states or cities". Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  38. ^ "Toplessness: A Right All Women Deserve". Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  39. ^ Yalom (1998) pp. 9–16; see Eva Keuls (1993), Reign of the Phallus: Sexual Politics in Ancient Athens for a detailed study of male-dominant rule in ancient Greece.
  40. ^ Yalom (1998), p. 18.
  41. ^ Hollander (1993), p. 6.
  42. ^ "Toplessness defined". Bikini Science. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  43. ^ Ebert, Roger (September 30, 1994). "Rapa Nui". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2009-10-06.
  44. ^ Harris, Richard Jackson (1 April 1999). A Cognitive Psychology of Mass Communication. Lawrence Erlbaum. ISBN 080583088X. Retrieved 11 September 2009. ... the use of body doubles, even for attractive stars, is common. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  45. ^ Carr, Rachael (3 August 2008). "I'm Kylie's bottom, Britney's boobs and Kristina's tummy ... but I still don't like my body". Mail Online. London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 11 September 2009. Forget plastic surgery and airbrushing, we celebrity body doubles are the big secret of the entertainment industry. Look hard enough and you'll find us everywhere – from pop videos and adverts to films and magazines. For the past three years, I've been working as a celebrity body double and have seen parts of my body 'stolen' by some of the world's biggest female stars.
  46. ^ Westwood, Matthew (May 23, 2008). "PM says Henson photos have no artistic merit". The Australian. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
  47. ^ "Mardi Gras FAQ - NOLA.com". The Times-Picayune. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  48. ^ "Mardi Gras New Orleans". The Times-Picayune. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  49. ^ "The Samba Parade". Ipacom travel. Retrieved June 17, 2010.


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