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Article
Mustaches and Masculine Codes in Early Twentieth-Century America
Journal of Social History
  • Christopher Oldstone-Moore, Wright State University - Main Campus
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2011
Disciplines
Abstract

The purpose of this article is to deepen our understanding of twentieth-century masculinity by considering the social function of facial hair. The management of facial hair has always been a medium of gendered body language, and as such has elicited a nearly continuous private and public conversation about manliness. Careful attention to this conversation, and to trends in facial hairstyles, illuminates a distinct and consistent pattern of thought about masculinity in early twentieth-century America. The preeminent form of facial hair-mustaches- was used to distinguish between two elemental masculine types: sociable and autonomous. A man was neither wholly one nor the other, but the presence and size of a mustache-or its absence-served to move a man one way or another along the continuum that stretched from one extreme to the other. According to the twentieth-century gender code, a clean-shaven man's virtue was his commitment to his male peers and to local, national or corporate institutions. The mustached man, by contrast, was much more his own man: a patriarch, authority figure or free agent who was able to play by his own rules. Men and women alike read these signals in their evaluation of men.

DOI
10.1093/jsh/shr002
Citation Information
Christopher Oldstone-Moore. "Mustaches and Masculine Codes in Early Twentieth-Century America" Journal of Social History Vol. 45 Iss. 1 (2011) p. 47 - 47 ISSN: 0022-4529
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/christopher_oldstone-moore/2/