The feminist history of the cardigan

Once upon a time, this autumn wardrobe staple was a symbol of female empowerment

A cardigan sweater.
(Image credit: Illustrated | mawielobob/iStock, sigurcamp/iStock, imagoRB/iStock, Library of Congress)

Big, sloppy cardigans are as much of a winter time staple as salt on pavement or marshmallows in hot chocolate. But before they became an essential in cold-weather wardrobes, cardigans were a tool of rebellion for women. The cozy knits allowed women to take control of the public presentations of their bodies, and shake off dated gender ideals. When women changed how they looked, often a social change followed close behind.

In the early 20th century, women's fashion was undergoing a transformation. Restrictive, uncomfortable clothes came to symbolize equally restrictive social systems, and rejecting one was rejecting the other. And so, by the 1940s, students at Smith, Wellesley, and Vassar colleges had essentially stopped wearing girdles — that tight garment worn beneath the clothes to shape and slim the contours of the body — and started sporting cardigans.

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Marlen Komar

Marlen Komar is a fashion history writer based out of Chicago. Her work has appeared in Time, CNN Style, and Vox among other publications.