Fashion Stories: Body Armour

Published: March 14, 2022, 10:56 a.m.

"My lady's corselet" was developed by a pioneer of free verse on the frontlines of feminism, the poet Mina Loy. Celebrated in the 1910s as the quintessential New Woman, her love of freedom was shadowed by a darker quest to perfect the female body, as her unusual designs for a figure-correcting corset show. Sophie Oliver asks how she fits into a history of body-correcting garments and cosmetic surgery, feminism and fashion. Working on both sides of the Atlantic writing poetry and designing bonkers body-altering garments: like a bracelet for office workers with a built-in ink blotter, or her \u2018corselet\u2019 to correct curvature of the spine in women - in the end Mina Loy couldn\u2019t stop time, and her late-life poetry is full of old clothes and outcast people from the Bowery, as she reckons with \u2013 and celebrates \u2013 the fact that she has become unfashionable.

Producer: Torquil MacLeod

Sophie Oliver teaches English Literature at the University of Liverpool and is a New Generation Thinker on the scheme run by BBC Radio 3 and the Arts and Humanities Research Council which turns academic research into radio programmes. You can find a collection of essays, discussions and features with New Generation Thinkers on the Free Thinking programme website under the playlist Ten Years of New Generation Thinkers https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08zhs35