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A BRIEF HISTORY: TOP FREEDOM IN THE UNITED STATES
By Robin E. Jensen
"One of my biggest fantasies is just to ride down the highway bare-breasted on my motorcycle. I resent the fact that
men do not have to wear shirts and women do, especially in the summer when it's so hot." (Ayalah & Weinstock,
1979, p. 122)
"It was probably a good thing for those children at the pool to see women's breasts as much as they wanted to and to be done with all the mystique, this hide-and-seek with women's breasts is obviously unnatural and everybody suffers in some way, especially women." (Ayalah & Weinstock, 1979, p. 128)
On the smoldering summer evening of June 21, 1934, everything seemed normal at Coney Island in New York City.
The beach was crowded with men, women, and children dipping into the water after a long day at work. Somewhere
in this scene, a group of men decided to remove their bathing tops and perform calisthenics on the beach. The next
day, The New York Times reported the scandalous incident. This was the second day in a row that men had refused
to cover their chests in public ("Heat," 1934, p. 3).
The men were arrested and rushed to the county courthouse. Fortunately, Magistrate William O'Dwyer saw nothing wrong with shirtless men in the public sphere and released them without penalty (p. 3). To this day, the ease with which these men earned the right to go topless stands in stark contrast to the efforts put forth by members of the opposite sex. For instance, sixty years later a woman went to jail for going bare-breasted in the Osceola National Forest (Latteier, 1998, p. 161).
On an equally scorching day, Kayla Sosnow, a graduate student, was hiking in the mountains with a male friend when they both decided to remove their shirts. Two forest rangers spotted the pair and demanded that Sosnow cover her chest. She refused to do so. Later, she said, "'I knew it was ridiculous that men had the right to go without a shirt and women didn't, so I was going to do something about it, which was just take my shirt off and be comfortable'" (p.161). Revealing her breasts in 1996 cost her four days in a Florida jail before she was allowed out on bail. Then, she: was found guilty of disorderly conduct and sentenced to thirty days in jail to be suspended after successfully serving five months probation, fifty hours of community service, payment of $600 in fines and fees, and a promise not to appear nude or partially nude in public for the next six months. (Latteier, 1998, p. 162) [At the time of Latteier's book publication in 1998, Sosnow was still facing appeals that were expected to last "three to five years" (p. 162).
According to www.bodyobjective.com in a story by Peri Escarda accessed on April 7, 2003, Florida's 8th Circuit Court of Appeals "overturned Kayla Sosnow's disorderly conduct conviction" three years and eight months after her initial arrest.]
Even before Sosnow's absurd experience in 1996, people had been fighting to eliminate the gender discrimination
involved in her case. These feminists are proponents of "topfreedom," which "is the notion that women have the
right to not wear a top in any situation that men also have that option" ("Topfree!" 2003). The same website
explains, "The word 'topfree' is used because it does not have the negative connotations of 'topless' in regard to
commercial sex work."
Although equality between the sexes has long been an ideal throughout most of western
society, very little attention has been paid to this area of striking discrimination. In order to delve into the gap
between current topless laws and the fight against gender discrimination, it is important that the arguments on both
sides of the issue are elucidated so as to encourage understanding and change. Therefore, this essay explores the
main arguments for and against topfreedom circulating in the public sphere and groups them into rhetorical
categories for future analysis.
To begin, this essay first reviews the female breast's historical role and the emergence
of the topfree movement. Second, it identifies and analyzes arguments for and against topfreedom using Perelman
and Olbrechts-Tyteca's (1969) work The New Rhetoric: A treatise on argumentation as a guide. Ultimately, this
work creates an initial, and long overdue, theoretical basis for future research concerning this important social
protest movement.
THE FEMALE BREAST'S HISTORICAL ROLE
In western culture, the female breast is overladen with contrasting and paradoxical meanings. The breast has
consistently played a central role in the perception of women as divine idols, sexual deviants, consumers, mothers,
citizens, employees, and medical patients.
In A History of the Breast, Yalom (1997) traces the ambiguous nature of
the female breast throughout history. On one hand, the breast has long been a symbol of spirituality and the sacred
role of motherhood that is modeled after the Virgin Mary nursing the baby Jesus (p. 31). It has been said that as
Mary provided nourishment for the divine child and is worthy of veneration, so are the nursing mothers who follow
in her footsteps. This view is evident in the numerous paintings, sculptures, and other ancient and modern art works
that feature the sacred act of a woman nursing her baby (p. 40). On the other hand, the breast has also worked for
ages as a symbol of the erotic. Separated from the innocent divinity of the Virgin Mary, the display of the breast is
associated with sexuality and carnal lust (p. 49).
The erotic breast was, and continues to be, dominated by men. In
this light, breasts are "offered up for the pleasure of a male . . . with the intent of arousing him, not her" (p. 90).
Latteier (1998) tackles the breast's sacred and erotic role from a modern perspective. She identifies the ambiguity
surrounding the female breast and the issue that brings this ambiguity to the forefront: breastfeeding. Latteier claims
that with the modern day commercialization of the breast as a sexual object, breastfeeding has become a taboo:
First, we do not trust the female body, and we feel squeamish about bodily secretions in general. Then, we value
breasts for their erotic appeal. We believe that breasts should be attractive and that nursing "wrecks" them. Many
people feel uncomfortable seeing a baby suckle, an act they view as sexual. (p. 89)
With this outlook, the Western world has adopted numerous alternatives to breastfeeding. Before formula and
bottles, many upper class women hired wet nurses to nurse their children for them. By the late 18th century, wet
nurses fed 90 percent of babies born in Paris, and other European urban areas boasted similarly high statistics (p.
106). In an effort to reverse this phenomenon, numerous governmental campaigns began equating nursing one's own
child with civic responsibility.
Yalom (1997) explains, "The nursing mother was seen as fulfilling her duty first to
her family and then to the commonwealth" as she nourished its future citizens (p. 107). Today, Nadesan and Sotirin
(1998) argue that the act of breastfeeding is still rich with ambiguous symbolism and that a new slant is brought to
the mother/sexual-object dichotomy in the "science of breast feeding" (p. 227). Science and medicine collapse the
act into a normalized procedure that values "the chemistry of the product, breast milk" (p. 227). Modern campaigns
encourage breastfeeding by using slogans such as "Breast is best," which frame the female breast as an object of
health, prosperity, and monetary profit (women who decide to breast feed are often encouraged by the medical
community to purchase nursing pumps, specialized bras, and expensive nutritional supplements). In this light, the
breast is not a symbol of motherhood or sexuality, but rather, simply a producer of a medically endorsed item for
consumption, equivalent to a faucet or perhaps an assembly line part (p. 229).
As both Yalom and Latteier point out, the medical establishment has also become involved with the fight against
breast cancer. Breast cancer has recently reached epic proportions with one in eight women in the United States
contracting the disease in their lifetimes (American Cancer Society, 2002, p. 7). Treatment for breast cancer can
include a harsh dose of chemotherapy, radiation, and a lumpectomy or mastectomy (Accad, 2001, p. 231). These
methods have proven to be extremely effective in ridding the body of cancer and extending breast cancer patients'
lives. Despite this reality, some people, including Accad (2001) in The Wounded Breast, hold that the removal of
the breast is often an unnecessary procedure that contributes to the objectification and mistreatment of the female
body (pp. 229-230).
For this reason, increasing numbers of women with breast cancer are turning to alternative
medicines in order to escape the sometimes harsh world of medical technology (Yalom, 1997, p. 276). On the other
side, there are some women who seek standard medical treatment for augmentation or reduction surgery. Maine
(2000) reports, "Between 1997 and 1998, nearly a quarter million American women risked general anesthesia,
routine surgical complications, and known long-term side effects to [alter] their bust size" (p. 132). While those who
get breast reduction surgery usually do so to take weight off of their backs and increase their mobility, women who
risk the many side effects of breast implantation often have purely aesthetic aims (Yalom, 1997, p. 239). Clearly, the
female breast has a long and many-sided history grounded in unrealistic expectations, symbolic power, and
patriarchal control.
THE EMERGENCE OF THE TOPFREE MOVEMENT
The many historical and contemporary issues surrounding the female breast have framed the emergence of what
Latteier (1998) labels "breast activism," where individuals and groups encourage women to take the possession of
their breasts away from the market economy (p. 153). Men were fighting for the right to go topfree in the United
States until at least the mid-1930s ("Heat," 1934, p. 3). [According to the "Topfree Equal Rights Association"
webpage, accessed on March 20, 2003, men continued to be arrested for going topless in other parts of the world
such as South Africa.]
The day on Coney Island in 1934 with which I opened this essay was one of the last instances
where men had to fight for the right to go topfree in the western world, but it was just the beginning of women's
battle to earn the same right. For instance, La Leche League was founded in 1956 and not only encouraged women
to breast feed their children, an action that was frowned upon in the sexually repressed, sterile environment of the
mid-20th century, but eventually defended women who nursed their babies and toddlers in public (Latteier, 1998, p.
154). To this day, La Leche League continues to play an active role in changing state obscenity laws that do not
make exceptions for the exposure of nursing mothers.
While the League was one of the earliest groups to support breast exposure, they have done so exclusively for the
benefit of nursing mothers. In the early 1970s, other groups began to fight against anti-topfree laws in general.
During this time, some women removed their shirts and bras as a statement against patriarchy and the objectification
of the female breast (Yalom, 1997, p. 276; Latteier, 1998, p. 39). These women challenged anti-nudity clauses that
include the female breast in the list of genitalia that must be covered in public (Hyde, 1997, p. 133). [Although the
ordinances vary from state to state, most of them resemble one cited in a California case from 1975. Nudity is
defined as displaying "'the genitals, vulva, pubis, pubic, symphysis, pubic hair, buttocks, natal cleft, perineum, anus,
anal region, or public hair region of any person, or any portion of the breast at or below the upper edge of the areola
thereof the female person'" (p. 133).]
For the most part, such efforts were shot down in the courts. For instance, in 1975 a California judge ruled that
because men and women's chests are biologically different, laws that limit only the exposure of women's breasts do
not constitute sexual discrimination (p. 144). Similarly, in 1977 a Florida judge charged women with disorderly
conduct for showing their breasts in public (Latteier, 1998, p. 161). Yet, the tides began to shift in favor of the
topfree movement in 1992 with the case of People v. Santorelli. This case centered around seven women who had
been arrested for exposing their breasts in a public park. The judge decided that there was no governmental interest
at stake in requiring women to cover their breasts and that the breasts of both men and women are legally the same
(Hyde, 1997, p. 144). Anti-topfree laws were thus eliminated in the state of New York, supporting the argument that
"power, not nature, tells us when and whether a breast is a sexual organ" (p. 148). Similar decisions have since been
made in places as diverse as the province of Ontario, Canada, the District of Columbia, and the state of Ohio. In
addition, between 1995 and 1997, 12 states enacted laws that allow nursing mothers to feed their children in public
(Latteier, 1998, p. 155).
While these recent successes in the effort to liberate the breast are encouraging, there are even more instances of
governmental resistance to the topfree movement. Sosnow's experience is neither isolated nor exceptional. For
instance, Evangeline Godron was arrested in August 1998 for swimming topfree in a city pool in Canada. This 64-
year-old woman was literally carried out of the pool and charged with two counts of assault and one of mischief. She
was then jailed for two days as a 'threat to society.' ("Woman's Choice," 2003)
Similarly, in New Jersey v. Vogt (2001) Arlene Vogt was charged $500 dollars for appearing topfree in a New
Jersey public beach ("Topfree Equal Rights Association," 2003). In 1997, the Topfree Equal Rights Association,
TERA, was created to help "women who encounter legal difficulty going without tops in public places in Canada"
and to inform "the public on the issue. It also helps women in the USA" ("Topfree Equal Rights Association," 2003).
Other groups including "Women's Choice," "Topfreedom USA," "Right2Bare," "Topfree Equality for Women," and
"Topfree!" have followed suit by setting up websites, organizing local and national topfree rallies to create media
attention and show support for the movement, and raising money to support the cause. Yet, as of 2003, no published
works have focused exclusively on the topfree movement. Thus, the following analysis of the primary arguments for
topfreedom will be based on websites, newspaper coverage, and court records in the hopes of providing a starting
point for research in this area. Before moving into the analysis, the next section of this essay introduces the
analytical tools that will serve as a guide for this work.
THE NEW RHETORIC
In 1969, an English translation of Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca's work The New Rhetoric: A treatise on
argumentation introduced "a compendium of methods of securing adherence, both argumentative schemes and
stylistic resources" to a rhetorical tradition consumed by Cartesian logic (Conley, 1990, p. 298). Rather than limit
their study of argumentative schemes to self-evident facts and logic, the authors developed a new rhetoric that is
audience-centric, relying on logic as much as it does presumptions, values, and hierarchies (Perelman & Olbrechts-
Tyteca, 1969, p. 2). Their goal was to characterize "the different argumentative structures, the analysis of which
must precede all experimental tests of their effectiveness" (p. 9). Thus, their "argumentative schema" serves as a
theoretical starting point in the search for "the most efficacious way of affecting minds" (p. 8). These aims are
appropriate in light of their definition of argumentation "as the discursive means by which an audience is led to
adhere to a given thesis, or by which its adherence is reinforced" (Conley, 1990, p. 297).
Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca's (1969) work serves as an appropriate guide for the following categorization and
analysis of the topfree movement for several reasons. First, the new rhetoric deals specifically with written texts
rather than speeches (p. 6). Until the topfree movement gains more credibility in the western world, written texts
will be the primary vehicle for making its points. Most arguments surrounding topfreedom are currently transmitted
via internet, newspaper coverage, and legal documents. Second, Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca wrote The New
Rhetoric to serve as a theoretical starting point for future work in the arena of argumentation (p. 9). Similarly,
groundwork needs to be laid for the debate surrounding the topfree movement in the way of categorizing
argumentative schemes before other work on this topic can be accomplished. Third, Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca
sought to uncover the "entire range of discursive means of argumentation, not just the logical forms" (Conley, 1990,
p. 297). In other words, they recognized the important role that arguments from value play in many areas of debate.
The arguments surrounding the issue of topfreedom are heavily value-laden, making this debate a case-in-point of
what the new rhetoric aimed to include in its analysis of argumentation. Ultimately, this project does not seek to
force The New Rhetoric's categories onto the arguments surrounding topfreedom but, rather, aims to follow in
Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca's footsteps by identifying key argumentative schema and pointing out where
similarities exist between the new rhetoric's categories and the arguments at hand. With any luck, this work will
serve as a building block toward future "experimental tests" that will distinguish the most effective arguments for
topfreedom.
THE RHETORIC SURROUNDING THE TOPFREEDOM DEBATE
After analyzing topfree websites, newspaper articles covering media events surrounding topfreedom, and court
documents obtained by using the search engines Lexis-Nexis and Google, I have divided the primary arguments for
topfreedom into the following categories: rhetoric of equality, rhetoric of sexuality, rhetoric of time, rhetoric of
commerce, and rhetoric of health. I will look at each category by identifying arguments on both sides of the debate,
giving a specific example for each side, and examining some of the theoretical assumptions underlying these
arguments using The New Rhetoric as a guide.
RHETORIC OF EQUALITY
First, the primary arguments surrounding the topfreedom debate deal with the rhetoric of equality. In most western
societies, anti-topfree ordinances and court decisions tend to be grounded in the argument that men and women are
inherently different and, therefore, laws must account for these differences. For instance, a few years after a group
now called "The Rochester Seven" began to protest for topless rights in New York, a guest columnist for USA
Today criticized their goals, arguing, "Bare-chested and bare-breasted are not the same," and shouldn't be treated as
if they are the same (Ellis, 1989, p. A8). On the other side, proponents of topfreedom make use of the tenets of
liberal feminism and operate under the assumption that allowing men to go topless in the public sphere, but not
women, is an example of inequality.
Topfree advocates argue that the following two claims are incompatible: 1)
women and men have equal rights; 2) women are required to cover their chests in areas where men are allowed to go
topfree. Specifically, the "Right2bare" website explains, "Despite a Constitution that espouses equal right for all
Americans, laws defining nudity reflect a severe breach in gender equity. A topless woman is a criminal," while a
topless man in the same situation is functioning within his constitutional rights (2003). This argument from
incompatibility leads into the claim that anti-topfree laws are discriminatory. The "Topfreedom USA" website offers
a case-in-point; it argues that laws against topfreedom are comparable to other practices that have been deemed
discriminatory in the past:
To those who disagree, or feel that topfree equal rights are unimportant, consider how you would feel if our laws
made it illegal for people of your race, or religion to remove your shirts in public, while people of other races, and
religions remained free to do so. Imagine the police rushing in to a crowd to stop an African American from dressing
like a white person. Imagine a Jew being fined, and forced to put on his shirt for trying to sunbathe like a Gentile.
Imagine a woman being arrested for swimming in shorts like her husband. (2003)
Obviously, forcing a person of a certain race or religious belief to wear a shirt when other people are given the
choice to do otherwise would be an act of discrimination. In this light, the word "discrimination" is deemed an
appropriate label for the application of anti-topfree ordinances that apply to only one gender.
The rhetoric of equality involves arguments from definition, the "rule of justice," and arguments from
incompatibility. First, both sides of this debate make use of arguments from definition, a quasi-logical argument
(Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca, 1969, p. 210). Those arguing against topfreedom define men and women as
biologically different and, therefore, conclude that the genders' "equal" treatment under the law will also have to be
different as well. Advocates of topfreedom, on the other hand, begin their argument by defining anti-topfree laws as
discriminatory. This argument from definition is based on what the new rhetoric calls the "rule of justice" that
"requires giving identical treatment to beings or situations of the same kind" (Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca, 1969,
p. 218). Here, the "rule of justice" fits into what Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca label the rhetoric of incompatibility,
another quasi-logical argument in which "the theses one is disputing lead to an incompatibility, which resembles a
contradiction in that it consists of two assertions between which a choice must be made, unless one rejects one or the
other" (p. 196). In the case at hand, one must reject either the claim that women and men should be treated equally
or the claim that women should be required to cover their chests in situations where men are not similarly restricted.
RHETORIC OF SEXUALITY
The rhetoric of sexuality is another category central to the topfreedom debate and involves two assumptions
underlying anti-topfree ordinances and laws: women's breasts are inherently sexual and, therefore, allowing women
to be topfree in the public sphere will lead to increased cases of sexual assault. Carol Faraone, the founder of Keep
Tops On, an anti-topfreedom group, claims that topfreedom is "'walking pornography'" and a practice that is
"'degrading to women and would harm children'" (Gillis, 1998, p. 05). Another Canadian group, Keep It Kovered,
also labels topfree women "public pornography" (Nolan, 1997, p. A1). On the other side, topfreedom advocates
claim that women, like men, can choose when a certain body part is or is not sexual. Women's breasts are not part of
the human genitalia and, thus, are sexual only in the way that a woman's legs or arms are sexual. In other words:
Different body parts arouse different people. Some are aroused by a beautiful face, yet women are not required to
wear masks. Some are aroused by feet, yet women can wear sandals. Some aroused by legs, yet women can wear
dresses or shorts. Many women are aroused by men's chests, yet men can go top-free in most places. ("Topfree
Equality for Women," 2001)
Similarly, children, it is argued, "only get upset or bothered by something if they're taught to do so," and given the
fact that babies are nourished by breasts, it is ridiculous to claim that the sight of those same breasts are in any way
harmful to children ("Topfree Equality for Women," 2001).
In response to the argument that allowing women to exercise topfreedom will lead to an increase in sexual assault
cases, topfree advocates argue that men must take responsibility for their own actions. Ultimately, they assert, "It's
not a woman's task to prevent a man from harassing her‚ by wearing clothes men deem suitable on her! Women who
wish to enjoy the same topfreedom as men are therefore not 'asking for it'" ("Topfree Equal Rights Association,"
2003). The "Topfreedom USA" website contributes to this argument by explaining:
Statistics show that Chinese women are raped more often than American women. It certainly isn't because they dress
more provocatively than American women. It's because they aren't valued as equals by their society. Their value is
disregarded, and their rights are denied. (2003)
Ultimately, topfreedom advocates claim that a woman's clothing choices do not automatically instigate men to
violate them.
Several categories of argumentation underlie the rhetoric of sexuality: argument from definition, pragmatic
argument, and the separation of the person from the act. Like the rhetoric of equality, both sides of the topfreedom
debate utilizing the rhetoric of sexuality are guided by definition. The definitions of words such as "breast,"
"genitalia," "pornography," and "indecency" serve both as starting points for the rhetoric of sexuality as well as
points of contention. Arguments from definition often lead into pragmatic arguments, "which allow a thing to be
judged in terms of its present or its future consequences . . ." (Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca, 1969, p. 267). For
instance, those against topfreedom first define exposed breasts as "pornography," then they deem the consequences
of topfreedom, exposed breasts in the public sphere, to be unacceptable. Topfreedom advocates often use a similar
argumentative pattern by first defining the female breast as a sexually neutral body part and then deeming
topfreedom appropriate given the consequences of not doing so: the criminalization of a non-sexual act.
By claiming that topfree women will create an increase in sexual assault, those against topfreedom use an argument
based on the separation of the "person from the act" where "an act is interpreted as a function of the person, and it is
failure to respect this stability which is deplored when someone is reproached for incoherent or unjustified change"
(Perelman & Olbrechts-Tyteca, 1969, p. 294). In this case, the person himself is separated from the act of sexual
assault because it is, supposedly, part of his nature to commit this act at the sight of topfree women. In response,
topfree advocates have chosen an existentialist argument by "putting the accent on the freedom of the person, which
places him in clear opposition to things" (p. 295). In other words, it is argued that men can choose to control
themselves in situations where they are exposed to topfree women.
RHETORIC OF TIME
Both sides of this debate make use of arguments dealing with elements of time. On one side, the supporters of antitopfree
laws claim that because women are showing more skin than they ever have before, modern society is on a
moral decline; the standards of the past are deemed superior to the standards of the present and the future. Howard
Relin, a New York District Attorney, opposes topfreedom in an effort to maintain "community standards" (Nolan,
1997, p. A1). Similarly, an Ottawa deputy mayor, Allan Higdon, contends that keeping female breasts covered is a
"common courtesy" and to do otherwise is "thoughtless of the sensibilities of others" (Gillis, 1998, p. 05). Superior
Court of New Jersey judge Wells in New Jersey v. Wells (2001) argues for the necessity of anti-topfree laws by
noting that traditionally female breasts are "unpalatable" for the eyes of the general public ("Topfree Equal Rights
Association," 2003).
Contrarily, advocates of topfreedom claim that women are finally on the verge of a liberation
that has never been available to them in the past. Over time, the covering of female body parts such as legs and arms
has, for the most part, been deemed unnecessary and repressive. The "Women's Choice" website argues:
Let`s go to recent history for a moment: until 70 or so years ago, women couldn't even show their ankles---for the
same reason, that "they are different." For centuries and centuries women had to wear skirts that were ankle length
(just imagine walking in that your whole life!). Today, women in western culture can wear miniskirts showing
"even" their knees---unimaginable for women before some 70 years ago. And, what happened? NOTHING. (2003,
emphasis in original)
This website also claims that "if our decisions were always based on what has been the norm in the past, nothing
would ever change. Slavery and other discriminatory activities would still be legal."
Clearly, the rhetoric of topfreedom is appealing to the future, while the rhetoric of anti-topfreedom is appealing to
the past. The latter is making use of what Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca (1969) label the "loci of order," which
affirms "the superiority of that which is earlier over that which is later" (p. 93). This argument can also be
understood in light of the "device of stages," commonly referred to as the "slippery slope" argument, where the
reasoning is described as follows: "if you give in this time, you will have to give in a little more next time, and
heaven knows where you will stop" (p. 282). In other words, as society has accepted women wearing less clothing
over time, debauchery triumphs over morality. Topfreedom is yet another step in the wrong direction. Topfree
proponents see things the other way around and appeal to arguments with "unlimited development" that: "insist on
the possibility of always going further in a certain direction without being able to foresee a limit to this direction,
and this progress is accompanied by a continuous increase of value" (p. 287). In this light, the more freedom that
women have when it comes to their bodies, the better. Topfreedom is another sign of progress.
RHETORIC OF COMMERCE AND HEALTH
These two categories are discussed together because, as this essay will discuss shortly, their argumentative structures
are very similar. First, the marketplace is another point of contention in the topfreedom debate creating a rhetoric of
commerce. Generally, the conventions of business and capitalism require that exposed female breasts be strictly
regulated and restricted to certain areas. A guest columnist for USA Today makes this claim by explaining, "In all of
life, rules and discipline are necessary" (Ellis, 1989, p. A8). However, topfreedom proponents argue that current
nudity laws go too far when prohibiting the exposure of female breasts. Breasts are treated like a commodity, they
say, and, as a result, women do not have control over their own breasts ("Topfree Equal Rights Association," 2003).
In the spirit of Marxist feminism, or what Donovan (1992) labels socialist feminism and describes as the belief that
women are oppressed by the combination of modern economic concerns and patriarchy, they identify a hypocrisy in
the regulation of female breasts when topless bars, the pornography industry, and the world of advertising profit
from the breast's exploitation. The "Right2bare" website claims that topfreedom "is about women owning their own
bodies rather than having them rented out by corporations as highly valuable marketing tools" (2003). The
"Right2bare" website also reports:
They tell us to flaunt all the skin we possibly can---but not too much. What would happen to the pornography
industry---magazines, clubs, internet---if women were free to walk around topless in a park or down the street? Our
breasts would lose their magical marketability. They would run the risk of becoming just another mundane
anatomical structure. Corporations would lose our bodies as tools to sell us everything from cars to cigarettes.
(2003)
Second, in light of the rhetoric of health, while those who support anti-topfree laws generally do not recognize a
correlation between women's health and the regulation of their breasts, topfreedom supporters draw several
conclusions about how these rules are detrimental to women's wellbeing. Some argue that requiring women to cover
their breasts in situations where men are not required to do so teaches women that their bodies are unacceptable and
objects of which they should be ashamed. This effect is only exacerbated when the breasts that are highlighted in the
media belong primarily to young, extremely toned models. Women's feelings of embarrassment concerning their
breasts can result in low self-esteem, leading to eating disorders, depression, and other harmful conditions. For
instance, the "Topfree Equality for Women" website explains:
A grandmother of the author of this page had such a poor self-image and was afraid to have someone look at her
body that she delayed going to a doctor until the cancer that she was suffering from had gone too far to be treated,
and she died as a result. (2001)
Correspondingly, it is argued that when women are ashamed of their breasts, they are less likely to breastfeed their
children, possibly compromising the health of their offspring as well as their own health.
In these final two categories, both the rhetoric of commerce and the rhetoric of health, Perelman and Olbrechts-
Tyteca's (1969) concept of "presence" is especially pronounced. "Presence" relies on the fact that "all argumentation
is selective" (p. 119). Thus, "by the very fact of selecting certain elements and presenting them to the audience, their
importance and pertinency to the discussion is implied" (p. 116). The concept of "presence" is easy to spot in these
two categories of argumentation because they discuss elements of the topfreedom debate that might not be
immediately apparent to an uninitiated individual: the commercialization of the breast and the health consequences
of anti-topfree laws. These arguments illustrate a specific "structure of reality" highlighting aspects of that reality
that the authors wish "to promote" (p. 261). In the case of the rhetoric of commerce and the rhetoric of health,
topfreedom advocates are drawing causal links (i.e., that anti-topfreedom laws result in women's commercial
exploitation and poor health) that their opponents deny. They know that "the same event will be interpreted, and
differently evaluated, according to the idea formed of the nature---intended or involuntary---of its consequences" (p.
270-271). Therefore, they have put forth arguments that feature consequences the public might not explore by itself.
CONCLUSIONS
Although topfreedom has a fairly long history in the western world, it continues to be an issue that receives little
thoughtful consideration or attention from the general public. In fact, while discussing the project at hand with
others, I found that upon hearing a brief synopsis of the topfreedom movement's goals, most people dismiss the idea
that women should be allowed to go topfree whenever men are given the choice to do so as ludicrous. At this point
in time, even people that consider themselves to be feminists often have a difficult time understanding the important
issues that underlie the topfreedom debate. In this light, it is apparent that arguments for topfreedom must be
thoughtful, purposive, and audience-centered in order to gain the consideration of an uninitiated public. While it
might be easy to create a media event featuring "bare breasted ladies," the title itself reminiscent of a circus act, it is
not so easy to get the public to take those same ladies' concerns seriously.
This essay seeks to begin the process of crafting argumentation that will bring the topfreedom movement forward by
providing a theoretical starting point for the discovery of, as Perelman and Olbrechts-Tyteca (1969) put it, "the most
efficacious way of affecting minds" to the issues surrounding topfreedom (p. 8). Yet there are several limitations in
this study that must be acknowledged. First, I have identified the five primary categories of argumentation
surrounding topfreedom as the rhetoric of equality, rhetoric of sexuality, rhetoric of time, rhetoric of commerce, and
rhetoric of health. However, there are also many secondary arguments surrounding the topfreedom debate that have
yet to be addressed but are beyond the scope of this essay.
Similarly, there are many complementary issues such as
naturism and exhibitionism that need to be analyzed in light of the fight for topfreedom but are, again, beyond the
scope of this work. Second, more emphasis has been placed on the arguments for topfreedom than the arguments
against topfreedom in this essay. However, this is less of a biased oversight than a response to the number of antitopfreedom
arguments circulating in the public sphere. Currently, because the status quo has not been in danger,
arguments supporting these laws are few and far between. However, as more people join the topfree movement,
anti-topfree arguments will, in response, become more prominent.
Clearly, the topfreedom movement is ripe with research opportunities. Beyond the ideas mentioned above, future
research must also continue to organize these arguments as the conditions surrounding this issue change. Perhaps
most importantly, scholars will need to build from these theoretical categories to decide which arguments best
interact with and inform audiences in various situations. Equal attention must be paid to the arguments that uphold
anti-topfree laws and ordinances so that we can both understand them and respond to them. Ultimately, topfreedom
as an idea is making its way into the agenda of public discourse and must continue on that path in order to achieve
the important goals that it upholds.
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Copyright © 2003 by Robin E. Jensen
Reprinted with Permission
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