by Matt Rozsa | Jan 29, 2023 | Salon.com
The popular perception of Western history is that humans have grown less puritanical over time; compare, for instance, how the sight of an ankle (on a man or woman) was considered shocking in 18th and 19th-century Victorian culture. Given our current attitudes towards clothing, clearly something has shifted, as even the percentage of one’s bare skin that is socially acceptable has increased linearly since then. ...
Originally posted on salon.com
by Matt Rozsa | Jan 29, 2023 | Salon.com
The popular perception of Western history is that humans have grown less puritanical over time; compare, for instance, how the sight of an ankle (on a man or woman) was considered shocking in 18th and 19th-century Victorian culture. Given our current attitudes towards clothing, clearly something has shifted, as even the percentage of one’s bare skin that is socially acceptable has increased linearly since then. ...
Originally posted on salon.com
by Matt Rozsa | Jan 29, 2023 | Salon.com
The popular perception of Western history is that humans have grown less puritanical over time; compare, for instance, how the sight of an ankle (on a man or woman) was considered shocking in 18th and 19th-century Victorian culture. Given our current attitudes towards clothing, clearly something has shifted, as even the percentage of one’s bare skin that is socially acceptable has increased linearly since then. ...
Originally posted on salon.com
by Matt Rozsa | Jan 29, 2023 | Salon.com
The popular perception of Western history is that humans have grown less puritanical over time; compare, for instance, how the sight of an ankle (on a man or woman) was considered shocking in 18th and 19th-century Victorian culture. Given our current attitudes towards clothing, clearly something has shifted, as even the percentage of one’s bare skin that is socially acceptable has increased linearly since then. ...
Originally posted on salon.com
by Matt Rozsa | Jan 29, 2023 | Salon.com
The popular perception of Western history is that humans have grown less puritanical over time; compare, for instance, how the sight of an ankle (on a man or woman) was considered shocking in 18th and 19th-century Victorian culture. Given our current attitudes towards clothing, clearly something has shifted, as even the percentage of one’s bare skin that is socially acceptable has increased linearly since then. ...
Originally posted on salon.com