Abigail L. Ureña
Prof. Sara Jacobson
ENGL 11000 R
19 November 2019
Composition in Two Genres
Interview
This interview was conducted by Michelle Obama. Michelle, interviewed Daphne G. Delany-Hobart. Daphne Delany Hobart is a woman from New York. She was born and raised in Brooklyn, and was the first woman in her family to attend college. Delany-Hobart, became the first female senior engineer at NYC’s top engineering firm in the early 70s. During this interview, Daphne talks about her experiences regarding clothing and fashion in the professional workplace. Daphne G. Delany, mentions the reactions and stigmas she faced in regard to her clothing choices, and how this affected her position as a woman in a male dominated field.
Interviewer- Michelle Obama
Interviewee- Daphne G. Delany-Hobart
Interviewer (Michelle Obama): Hello, how are you doing today? Welcome to today’s program!
Interviewee (Daphne G. Delany-Hobart): I am doing great, thank you so much for inviting me today.
Michelle Obama: So today I want to talk about your college experience, and how you felt as a young woman entering the corporate workforce.
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: Yes, that’s great, I have many memories and experiences I would like to share today!
Interviewer: First, how did your family react when you told them you were going to college?
Interviewee: I was the first woman in my family to go to college, so that was already difficult for my family to comprehend my choice.
Michelle Obama: Yes, I can understand why your choice would have been met with those reactions. I was also the first woman in my family to attend college, so I can understand your point of view.
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: I stood by my choice that I wanted to attend college. I wanted to be different from all of the other women in my family. I wanted to have my own career, I wanted to tell a story that hadn’t been told before.
Michelle Obama: That’s great! Would you like to tell us a little bit more about your experience at college, and what happened after graduation.
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: Yes, since I was a little girl, I was very different from the other girls. I always wanted to do something, I could never sit still. Everytime I had an idea I would have to make it happen. I was very curious and a bit mischievous. Deep down my parents always knew that I wanted to do more. When I told them I wanted to be an engineer, they were surprised but not shocked. In college, I was the only female in all of my classes for all 4 years.
Michelle Obama: Wow, I assume that many other women, including myself, share that same experience.
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: I was already used to being the only female in a large group of men, but, I think I was still very naive, because when I entered the workplace, I experienced more prejudices than I thought I would have.
Michelle Obama: How was your college experience different from your experience in the workplace?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: Joining the workforce was a drastic change from the college scene. At work there were many more unspoken rules and stigma regarding a woman’s place.
Michelle Obama: How did this stigma impact your career, and affect your daily life?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: At this time in many places, women were regarded as intellectually inferior to men. This mindset bled into the workplace as well, and defined the way I was treated by many of my co-workers and bosses.
Michelle Obama: Besides being prejudiced for being a woman in this field, did you receive any sexist rules to follow regarding your clothing choices?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: Absolutely, I was required to dress as a “woman should”, they asked me to dress “modestly” and look “feminine”. However, many of these unspoken fashion rules were the social norm for women at this time.
Michelle Obama: What rules were subjected on you based on the clothing that was appropriate for you to wear?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: My job required me to be very hands on in some cases, and on others to be more professionally dressed. For the men, it was normal for them to dress more casually when visiting a work site; however, for me the case was a bit different. Since we were at a work site, I needed to dress more casually to be able to work. Because of the norms at the time, I chose clothing that was similar to what men wore at this time, but I tried my best to make it look more appropriate and feminine, to abide by the norms of the time. I wore similar clothes to what the men wore; at work this didn’t seem as odd, but as soon as I left work, I could feel all of the stares, and hear the murmurs of the strangers that passed me by.
Michelle Obama: In what ways do you think you were required to conform to these norms, even though you worked in a male dominated field?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: I was expected to dress the part. I had to be “modest” and “ladylike”, while working a job, that had previously been populated by males.
Michelle Obama: In what ways did you try to change the stereotype of the working woman, and how were your efforts received?
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: I decided to defy the stereotype by wearing pants to work. I didn’t think the reactions I received would be so drastic. The reactions I received differed greatly compared to when I wore a skirt or a dress. My male co-workers were often confused and didn’t think that pants were appropriate attire for women. This prejudice transcended past the workplace, and my new clothing choice, was received by many objections and protests from many of the people around me.
Michelle Obama: How do you think a young woman’s experiences today would differ from yours? How do you think fashion in the workplace has evolved?
Daphne Delany-Hobart: I think that today women have the ability to dress in ways that they enjoy. I believe fashion in the workplace has evolved tremendously, and this has benefitted women. Women now have more choices on what is seen as “appropriate” dress for work, and this has led to women being more comfortable and perform better in the workplace. There are still so many barriers we have to cross to reach gender equality, but so many stigmas and norms regarding a woman’s place in the workplace have changed since I had first entered the workplace, and that can be seen as a testament to how far women have come in the past decades.
Michelle Obama: Wonderful, I agree and relate with your messages so well. However this is all the time we have today. Thank you so much for talking with us today, your valor and courageousness can be an example for many young women that want to follow your footsteps.
Daphne G. Delany-Hobart: I am so honored for being here today, and being able to share a little bit of my story. Thank you so much Michelle for having me today!
Magazine Article
This is an article from a magazine like The New Yorker, Vogue, or The New York Times that talks about the changes regarding clothing for women in a professional workplace.
How Far Have We Come to Gender Equality? Just ask Women’s Fashion.
A perspective on the changes women’s clothing has experienced since women started entering the workplace
Abigail L. Ureña
The femenist movement of the 1960s made a huge impact on the way women dressed. The 60s were a decade of change for women; new fashion trends were popularized and the clothes that were advertised and marketed for women that worked outside of the home became more modern. The way in which work clothes have evolved, as well as the stereotypes of “the working woman” has changed throughout the decades.
After World War 1 and World War 2, women’s roles in the workplace became more prominent. These new roles called for more modern ways of dressing; women’s clothing now had more relaxed lines and silhouettes, and did not restrict women in many ways clothes had done before. Women became liberated from corsets and full bustles that were custom previously. These women that were now emancipated from the constraints of their attire could be seen carrying out new roles as working members of society, this allowed women to further integrate into a professional workplace. Thus, society adopted the structured look as androgynous as women’s rights advanced. This was said to have sparked the second wave of feminism in the U.S.
During the 1960s, dressing became more casual than in the past decades. It became more appropriate for women to show more of their legs. During this time women began sporting minidresses and miniskirts, which were becoming very fashionable. In the last decades, the casual trend became commonplace. Since then, there has been a more relaxed attitude when it pertains to clothes worn by female employees in a professional environment. There have been measures to move away from the traditional suit in the workplace, and more women began swapping out their skirts and dresses for pants in the workplace.
In the 60s, many women wore bright and pastel colors, compared to the muted and subtle hues worn by women decades before them. Despite the advances women were required to appear “ladylike”, and dress “respectable” by wearing dresses with high necklines. Due to the stigma still placed on women’s clothing at this time, Pussy-bow blouses became increasingly popular. This fashion trend was popularized by working women, in an attempt to feminize a very traditionally masculine look. Pussy-bow blouses were viewed as a fitting equivalent to the traditional masculine suit-and-tie look; for many women this was seen as an attempt to be feminine but fit into what was then a male world.
Women now have more options than ever on what is seen as acceptable clothing options to wear to work. As jeans became increasingly appropriate attire for the workplace, women no longer feel the need to impose their status of power through suits. The last decade has seen women explore more style choices than ever, pantsuits are almost obsolete, and women now dress more closely to what they would wear when not working; a vernacular style of dressing. Women are now reasserting their femininity by wearing dresses and skirts—a new type of power play. Now it can be interpreted that skinny suits and high heels, prove that being powerful and being feminine aren’t mutually exclusive. The option of having more clothing styles to wear for work, shows the strides women have made in the workplace since the 1960s.
What women wear to work says a lot about how far we’ve come in gender equality. Formality in workplace dress codes, have decreased since women started entering the workplace. Currently many professional, workplaces have adopted a more casual style; women can now sport many different outfit choices, they also have the ability to wear many different hair styles and makeup choices. In regards to gender equality there’s still so much to be done, but just by looking at the evolution and modernization of workplace fashions, one can see how much progress women have made.