
Coco Chanel
Linda Simon(Author)
Reaktion Books (Publisher)
Published on 1. August 2011
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-1-86189-859-3 (ISBN)
Description
The name Chanel brings immediately to mind the signature scent of No. 5 and the understated but sophisticated glamour of a simple black dress and pearls. But to label Gabrielle 'Coco' Chanel (1883-1971) solely as a fashion designer is to overlook her social and cultural significance. Chanel was an iconoclastic entrepreneur, who rebelled against and manipulated gender expectations of her time. With her menswear-inspired designs, her loose jersey sweaters and her svelte, unadorned gowns, she changed the female silhouettes and became known as a champion of women's freedom. From 1913, when she first opened a hat shop in the holiday resort of Deauville, until her death in 1971, Chanel sold more than just fashion - she sold a myth that became as attractive to many women as her coveted outfits, accessories and perfumes.
Linda Simon teases apart the myth that Chanel and her adoring public collaborated to create, and explores its contradictions - Chanel was a self-proclaimed recluse who emerged as one of the most spectacular personalities of her time; she was a brilliant businesswoman who signed away 90 per cent of her company; a genius who claimed she was nothing more than an artisan. Simon examines the world both reflected and shaped by Chanel, setting her life and work within the context of events in France and America from before the First World War to the profound social changes of the 1960s. Simon's lively book is a clear-eyed perspective on a woman whose influence and legend transcend the world of fashion.
Linda Simon teases apart the myth that Chanel and her adoring public collaborated to create, and explores its contradictions - Chanel was a self-proclaimed recluse who emerged as one of the most spectacular personalities of her time; she was a brilliant businesswoman who signed away 90 per cent of her company; a genius who claimed she was nothing more than an artisan. Simon examines the world both reflected and shaped by Chanel, setting her life and work within the context of events in France and America from before the First World War to the profound social changes of the 1960s. Simon's lively book is a clear-eyed perspective on a woman whose influence and legend transcend the world of fashion.
Reviews / Votes
For those who want an up-to-date bio that's swift and savvy, there is Linda Simon's Chanel. It's a slim volume, but even here we get details we don't get elsewhere, including a full chapter on the musical Coco, which opened on Broadway in 1969 starring Katharine Hepburn (tellingly, Chanel's first choice for the role was the much younger Hepburn: Audrey). * <i>Wall Street Journal</i> * Simons assessment of the designers legacy her fashion helped redefine femininity as a sort of adolescent insouciance is nicely put. * <i> </i><i>Independent on Sunday</i> * Of all the biographies of Coco Chanel that I have read, Linda Simons relies most on fashion primary source materials such as fashion and womens magazines and newspapers. For the first time, I learned in detail about the wider context in which Coco Chanels fashions were viewed. * Chanelphile.com *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Illustrations
38 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 130 mm
Width: 200 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-86189-859-3 (9781861898593)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Linda Simon is Professor Emerita of English at Skidmore College, New York. Her many books include Coco Chanel (Reaktion, 2011) and The Greatest Shows on Earth: A History of the Circus (Reaktion, 2014).