HistoryThongs are descended from the earliest form of clothing, the loincloth, which were generally a male's clothing item, the reverse of modern western culture where the thong has more acceptance among women. In modern clothing, thongs first became popular as a swimsuit style in Brazil. The origin of the word "thong" is from the Old English thwong, a flexible leather cord.[3] The first direct descendant of the loincloth, in the direction of thong, was the jockstrap, created by Chicago sporting goods company Sharp & Smith in 1874. The first historical reference to the thong in post-1900's is in 1939 New York City when Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia ordered nude dancers to dress more appropriately. Jacques Heim's and Loius Réard's original bikini from 1946 — that introduced the term "bikini" — had a culotte with a thong back. Fashion designer Rudi Gernreich was credited with introducing the modern thong in 1974 which grew in popularity in South America, especially in Brazil.[4] In the 1990s, the thong began to gain widespread acceptance and popularity in the United States of America (U.S.), amounting for sales of more than $2 billion per year in 2006.[5] Design and variety
Types of thongs include the traditional thong, the g-string, and v-string. There are many other styles available:
Thongs for men are cut differently than thongs for women. Thongs are available in a wide variety of materials, including fleece, silk, cotton, satin, nylon, lycra/spandex, and latex and are also available in maternity styles. A string tanga is a type of tanga swimwear which has the waist band replaced with strings which are tied. The g-string is one extreme variety of the thong. Thong and G-stringThe G-string is one form of the thong.
Men's thongs
In the USA and Europe, the wearing of thongs by men was once mainly limited to the dance belt, the posing pouch for bodybuilders and the realm of male strippers. Recent surveys place the number of American men who wear thongs as their preferred underwear style at over 4% and the number of men who sometimes wear thongs at around 20%, more in the younger generations and less in the older.citation needed Thongs and societyThe wearing of thong swimwear on the beach is fairly common in the Southern European countries and on the tropical beaches of South America and Florida. Some county and municipal governments in the United States have passed legislation generally or specifically relating to thongs, such as Huntington Beach, California, which in 2007 passed an anti-nudity ordinance that did not ban thongs.[8][9] Councilman Don Hansen assured, "we remain thong-friendly in Huntington Beach." [10] Recent surveys place the number of American women who wear thongs as their preferred underwear style at 28%. As of 2002, thongs were the fastest-selling type of underwear for women. While thongs are available for girls as young as third grade [11] it is common for parents to prevent young girls wearing them until they reach their teenage years. Many reasons exist why women and girls may choose to wear thong underwear or swimwear:[12] prevention of visible panty lines[13], prevention of ride up so one needn't pull at their underwear in public, comfort, doesn't ride up past jeans, fashion consciousness including the feeling of more adult and more feminine, saving storage space during travels, minimization of tan lines. This is one item of clothing that cannot be worn in dance competitions under the rules of the IDSF (International DanceSport Federation). ControversySeveral institutions have banned thongs, mainly schools and universities.[14][15][16] In one particular case in 2002, a female high school vice principal in San Diego physically checked up to 100 female students' underwear[17] as they entered the school for a dance, with or without student permission, causing an uproar among students and some parents and eliciting an investigation by the school into the vice principal's conduct.[18] In her defense, the vice principal said the checks were for student safety and not specifically because of the wearing of thongs ("This was a safety issue, it was not a choice of underwear issue").[19][20][21][22][23][24] Of particular controversy is the retail by several outlets, including Abercrombie & Fitch, Argos and Etam, of thongs for children as young as seven. A spokesman for Abercrombie & Fitch stated that he could list "at least 100 reasons why a young girl would want thong underwear."[25] This controversy spawned a great deal of free publicity for Abercrombie, including a chain letter that received wide circulation.[26] Media attention was drawn to the phenomenon when a British primary head teacher voiced concerns that pupils as young as 10 were wearing thong underwear to school.[27] See alsoWikimedia Commons has media related to:
References
| | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||