(845) 358-9126 | 8 S. Broadway | Nyack, New York 10960 | pickwickbooks@gmail.com | Open 7 Days a Week!
(845) 358-9126 | 8 S. Broadway | Nyack, New York 10960 | pickwickbooks@gmail.com | Open 7 Days a Week!
Cart 0
Bloomsbury Visual Arts

Peacock Revolution : American Masculine Identity and Dress in the Sixties and Seventies

Regular price $40.95 $40.95 Unit price per
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Peacock Revolution
Author(s): Daniel Delis Hill

The Peacock Revolution in menswear of the 1960s came as a profound shock to much of America. Men's long hair and vividly colored, sexualized clothes challenged long established traditions of masculine identity. Peacock Revolution is an in-depth study of how radical changes in men's clothing reflected, and contributed to, the changing ideas of American manhood initiated by a 'youthquake' of rebellious baby boomers coming of age in an era of social revolutions.

Featuring a detailed examination of the diverse socio-cultural and socio-political movements of the era, the book examines how those dissents and advocacies influenced the youthquake generation's choices in dress and ideas of masculinity. Daniel Delis Hill provides a thorough chronicle of the peacock fashions of the time, beginning with the mod looks of the British Invasion in the early 1960s, through the counterculture street styles and the mass-market trends they inspired, and concluding with the dress-for-success menswear revivals of the 1970s Me-Decade.



Review(s):

“Daniel Delis Hill's book will prove of significant interest to scholars of popular American dress, researchers in men's fashion and to historians of the period. It represents a focused account with a strong basis in sound primary research and is engagingly and accessibly presented.” —The Journal of Dress and Culture

“Delis Hill's book will prove of significant interest to scholars of popular American dress, researchers in men's fashion, and to historians of the period. It represents a focused account with a strong basis in sound primary research and is engagingly and accessibly presented.” —The Journal of Dress History





ISBN:  9781350136540