[On May
20, 1873 dry goods retailer Levi Strauss and tailor Jacob Davis received
a patent for work pants reinforced with metal rivets, and blue jeans were
born. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy Strauss and a few other contexts for
those uniquely American articles of clothing!]
On three famous denim
jackets that embody three recent eras.
1)
Bruce:
What, you thought I’d start somewhere else?? Bruce Springsteen certainly didn’t
originate the blue jean jacket (per this
Glamour piece that history seems
to go back about as far as blue jeans themselves, nearly a hundred years
pre-Boss), and he was by no means the first celebrity of the media age to be
spotted in one (yesterday’s subject James Dean
might hold that honor), but I don’t think it’s just the Bruce-ophile in me
talking when I say that Springsteen’s ubiquitous
denim jacket (and blue jeans) during the Born
in the U.S.A. era (when he
graduated from rock star to rock god) helped launch the 1980s as the decade of
the jean jacket. Like Dean, Bruce was only play-acting the part of a workin’
man (he notes at the outset of his recent Broadway show that this was the first
time he’d ever worked a five-day-a-week job)—but so were nearly all of us who
wore those ‘80s jean jackets, after all.
2)
Thelma:
Geena Davis’s Thelma in 1991’s Thelma and Louise
was a fictional character as well, but one closely linked to her working-class
identity and life. The jean jacket she sports for much of the film could be
analyzed as part of that identity and status, but I would say that it also and
perhaps especially reflects a rock ‘n roll rebel layer beneath the shy country
girl exterior we meet at the start of the film. Thelma and Louise’s plot mostly depicts Thelma’s arc toward the
full expression of that rebellious self, and could thus be read as a turning point
towards a decade that would feature other prominent rebellious and angry female
icons, including a few years later Alanis Morissette (who’s been known to sport
a jean jacket of her own). As the 80s turned to the 90s, that is, jean
jackets evolved but endured—and if any up-and-coming AmericanStudiers wanna
write a thesis on the jean jacket and American culture from Bruce to Thelma,
the idea is all yours!
3)
Miley:
As with most everything else in the 21st century, it’s difficult to
determine whether more recent iterations of famous jean jackets have represented
genuine self-expressions or nostalgic embraces of those prior pop culture eras
and identities. It’s likely a bit both, as illustrated by one of our contemporary
culture’s true chameleons, Miley
Cyrus. But one of Miley’s first such jean jackets was the revealing one she
sported in 2013 (see the story hyperlinked under her first name above), at the
moment when she was just beginning
to shift from the childish Hannah Montana character into the far more adult
and rebellious Miley Cyrus one (which may or may not be her, y’know, authentic self).
So however we read that particular jean jacket or any of Miley’s clothing and
identity choices and stages, I’d have to say that once again, perhaps as
always, the denim jacket has embodied an era and zeitgeist in American popular
culture.
Last blue jean
studying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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