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Pinterest page with examples of skintern dressing habits |
In American workplaces,later it is claimed that this is an international term
a skintern is an informal term for a summer intern, usuallyOR; the sources don't say "usually"
female, who dresses in clothing more revealinginapproriate, not necessarily more revealing or some of the examples later don't apply (such as KPMG's fashion show
than that which is common for the fieldworkplace in question;field is much wider
.[1][2]
The term is a portmanteau of skin and intern.presumably
It was first widely used about such interns working in offices of members of the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, D.C. around the mid-2000s;OR which is at least called into doubt by the next sentence
[3] Julia Allison claims it was used in that sense as early as 2000.No, she claims it has been in use "for years" and she heard it used as far back as 2000; she may be claiming that it had already been around for years by then
[4] Since then it has spread to other industries outside government and politics that also employ summer interns.OR;there is nothing to say it has spread in that direction "since then" (when?) and the article cited only mentions its use on Capitol Hill
[5]
The phenomenon is sometimes a deliberate sartorial strategy, but more oftenarticle says often, not more often
is believed to result from ignorance of accepted professional dress standards.[6] Older women in the offices where those interns work have often responded by advising them on how to dress more appropriately.This ref is to Katherine Goldstein giving advice, it does not support anything stated in this sentence
[2] Some feminists,only a single feminist in this blog used as the ref
however, have seen the term as yet another symptom of inherent sexism in the workplace, since it is so widely applied.[7]
History
[edit]In the mid-2000s, the media began reportingOR
that the congressional staffers who manage the intern programs in the United States House of Representativesall of them?
complained that while most of the young women showed up for work in the same conservative professional attire that the staffers and members did, some chose more revealing clothing. Chad Pegram, a coordinator of Miami University's intern programa program, not the program
, recalls that when he took a group to lunch with one member of the state's congressional delegation, one young woman stood out by wearing "a skirt that was way too short" and flip-flops. "It reflected badly on her because everyone else looked great," he recalled. "She embarrassed herself."[3][6]
Other staffers, many of whom themselves began their careers as interns, reported later that they had seen young women come in for internships wearing "gold stiletto heels, thigh-high boots [and] belly shirts" in addition to short skirts.this is a composite example in the source
Most male staffers did not mind, but female staffers, even those just a few years older, were often resentful and offended.Sweeping generalisation; admittedly mostly from the source, but still inappropriate for an article
The scandal in which White House intern Monica Lewinsky's sexual affair with President Bill Clinton had led to his impeachment was fresh in in institutional memory,when?
and some staffers and journalists wondered if the skimpily dressed young female interns were trying to emulate her.does either source say that?
[3][6] In 2004, Jessica Cutler, a staffer for Ohio Senator Mike DeWine, wrote for a while a blog in which she detailed an active sex life with a variety of men she met through her work, which did little to dispel that idea.source doesn't say she was a "skintern" or that her revelations "did little to dispel that idea." Or that she slept with men
[8]
In June 2005, as another group of summer interns began their weeks on Capitol Hill, Betsy Rothstein wrote an article about the phenomenon for The Hill. "We were talking about this at dinner the other night, about how some interns show up in some of the skimpiest clothing," she quoted an unnamed female press secretary as recalling. "One of the boys called them skinterns, which I thought was hilarious."[3] This appears to have been the first recorded use of the term.[Note 1]Your web search is not a reliable source
Another term came from an unidentified "female Republican aide," who claimed she kept and shared a list of "daily offenses" such as young women wearing metallic shoes and handbags as well as wifebeaters. "If you are going to wear stilettos or heels, no complaining about how they hurt. Interns need to learn to walk in them." She continued "My favorite term is the Saturday-night intern, one who always dresses like it is a Saturday night. They are all over."[3]very close to the source
When the Washington Times covered the phenomenon a year later, it used the shorter term. "They'’re known as 'skinterns,'" the paper wrote. "Those who think 'belly shirts' are career wear. If the devil wears Prada, the skinterns wear nada. As if Washington wasn't sweltering enough." It reported that the popular political blog Wonkette had started a "Hill Intern Hotties Contest" for both male and female interns. The article implied that the phenomenon was no longer restricted to just congressional offices but had migrated, like many former members of Congress, to lobbying firms on K Street, where the same standards of dress often obtain.this doesn't make sense
[9]
Four years later, in 2010, The Baltimore Sun reported that private employers in its coverage area were dealing with skinterns. "Booty shorts. Thigh-grazing dresses. Flip-flops. Ripped jeans.Cleavage-baring tops. See-through skirts. Forgotten bras. Employers have seen it all—and wish they hadn't." Missy Martin, vice president of human resources at Ripken Baseball, told the Sun that interns were "showing up to work in bar clothes. Short skirts, tank tops and cleavage showing. It's like, 'Kids, do you realize you're not supposed to be dressed like you're going out to drink in Canton?'"[5]
By the middle of the next decade,the 2020s? Cool time-travelling article
the skintern phenomenon was no longer limited to Capitol Hill.the previous paragraph has already established this
Articles advising interns on how to dress appeared on popular websites in Juneevery June?
, when most internships start. " ... [B]efore long, the annual summer parade of skinterns will begin," wrote Katherine Goldstein, editor of Vanity Fairs website, dropping the scare quotes in a 2013 Slate piece advising young women on how to dress in offices. At her former employer, she recalled, "[e]very June there would be a new batch, just as clueless about appropriate office attire as those from the year before. Think dresses so clingy they leave nothing to the imagination, tops worn without a bra and tied together with string, daisy dukes, sheer harem pants, and cleavage straight out of a men's magazine."[2] The following year the Kansas City Star ran a similar piece.though it does mention skinterns once or twice, that piece is mostly about evolving trends in workplace attire
[1]All these quotes about which particular items of clothing are inappropriate aren't necessary
A 2012 blog post by GlobaLinks Abroad suggested the phenomenon had spread overseas as well. For the organization, Monika Lutz advised young women headed for internships abroad to eschew "spaghetti straps, cleavage, short skirts, backless outfits or any combination of the above" if they did not want to be remembered as skinterns. "But men are not excluded from the fashion police's searchlight," she added. "They can be seen sporting hoodies, flip flops, super baggy cargo pants, or some fresh-off-the-court sneakers, just to cite the most common occurrences."[10]this is a private blog
Similarly, in a 2013 piece giving dressing advice to interns in the Huffington Post, fashion journalist Lauren Rothman, while generally focused on issues specific to women, reminds those heading for Silicon Valley to "leave the hoodies and sweats to those who have already made their millions."[11]
On some issues, sartorial choices of skinterns became accepted for all Hill staffers. In 2014, the Washington Post reported that flip-flops had become so common in congressional office buildings during summers as to cause a noise problem for some present when the women wearing them reported for work in the morning. "It sounds like the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse," complained Abra Belke, a former staffer and lobbyist who by then was writing Capitol Hill Style, a fashion blog. "Interns and junior staffers are just clomping down the hall in their $5 Old Navy flip-flops."[12]
Causes
[edit]Some observers think at that least some of the young women whose choices of clothing get them labeled as skinterns are doing so deliberately, in order to stand out from more conservatively dressed colleagues. "Maybe if you can get noticed, you might get a full-time position," Wonkette editor Alex Pareene told ABC News in 2006. Nicole Williams, who coaches women entering the workforce, agrees that in some cases the skintern look is exactly what the wearer intends. "You've got the summer to prove 'I can work here' or 'I can't work here,' so to get noticed, why not?" one intern told good Morning America. [6]
It has also been suggested that most misattired interns, male or female, are not familiar with professional dress standards, especially in an era of more relaxed standards such as those embodied by business casual.[5] One intern who said she was from Washington state told the Washington Times in 2006 that her friends at home were stunned to hear that she was not allowed to wear jeans at her internship in the capital.[9]
They may also misunderstand what is meant by vague instructions on how to dress. Carol Vellucci, director of the Career Center at the University of Baltimore, told The Baltimore Sun that many students seem to her to think that "dressing up" means wearing outfits they would typically wear to a nightclub or bar. "It seems to be something that especially younger students aren't quite getting," she said.[5]
Interns may also not have the kind of established wardrobe one would expect from an older adult. "These are young men and women, and they can’t be expected to be decked out in Brooks Brothers," Anthony Weiner, then a congressman from New York, told The Hill in its 2005 story. When he himself had interned for Charles Schumer in the House during the 1970s, he recalled that he owned one suit at the time, wearing it to the office every day but with a different shirt and tie.[3]
Responses
[edit]When the first started appearing in Congress,doesn't make sense
many stafferssource only gives one example
were cautious about counseling the skinterns in their midst on proper dress. "You have to be respectful because chances are they are a donor's kid or a friend of the lawmaker," one malearticle doesn't say the "aide" is male
staffer told Rothstein about dealing with interns in general Instead, they often used indirect means, such as marginalization.OR generalisation drawn from the following quote
"We had a [recent] intern who we just called Belly. She walked around with a belly shirt on one time too many, and she did get into trouble. Nobody gave her work to do," recalled the press secretary who had shared the coinage of the term with Rothstein. In 2011, Washington Post reporter Jenna Johnson shared some anecdotes about the "less-than-subtle" tactics some offices had used, such as one office where the offending intern was asked not to be in the intern class's group photo for the member's website.no evidence this is anything but a hypothetical example
[13]
Sometimes more direct pressure has been used. In another incident, a young woman in overly transparent capris was made to stay seated at a desk until the congressman'sboss's, doesn't say it was a congressman
wife had left the office for the day.this appears anecdotal too
[3] Johnson wrote of an intern being given a tie and told to put it on. In another case the other interns staged an "intervention" during the local bar's happy hour after the workday.another hypothetical with no eveidence it ever took place
}[13]
In the wake of media attention to the phenomenon, many members of Congress began instituting stricter dress codes for staffers and interns.this is reported as already being in place before the article
"They should dress professional, and we demand that," a spokesman for Florida Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart told Rothstein. "They shouldn't dress like they're working a corner. You shouldn't be dressing like Paris Hilton."[3] A year later, Rothstein told the Washington Times the stricter attention to interns' dress was having the desired effect. "I really think the interns are getting smarter because of these programs," she said. "They're coming from college. They don't have the thought process. They're learning they can't dress like that."doesn't make sense in the context of this article; the term only appears in 2005 apparently and by mid 2010s had spread internationally, so these programs would demonstrate the opposite effect if this article is accurate
[9]
Colleges have also been trying to prepare interns ahead of time. At the University of Baltimore, Vellucci teaches a cource on "Personal and Professional Skills for Business" which is a requisite for business majors, The Baltimore Sun reported. Outside the city, Towson University's business school stages a "Dress Smart" program in which students themselves model attire of varying degrees of propriety.[5]This is Baltimore-centric
In 2014, The Wall Street Journal reported that KPMG staged a fashion show for its interns at the beginning of every summer. At a hotel in Orlando, the accounting firm's recruiters modeled acceptable outfits from stores such as The Gap, complemented by slide presentations on acceptable and unacceptable attire in the office. The 1,200 interns in attendance also received $200 gift cards to Men's Wearhouse and (for women) Banana Republic, as well as a free silk tie and piece of jewelry respectively. The company's recruiting director admitted that the show and gifts were prompted by some past interns dressing "not in a way that we would have preferred".[14]this article has now drifted off to be "Dress code for interns"
Criticism
[edit]"I wince every time I hear the term 'skintern'", a pseudonymous female intern complained in a 2010 post on the Feministing blog. Why, she asked, were male interns who dressed inappropriately merely labeled "sloppy", while young women who did were sexualized? "'Slutty' has a very different and much more harmful repercussion for an intern's career than 'sloppy,'" she noted. "As a result, I am sometimes paralyzed in the mornings, worried that that my sweater seat is too tight or my button down is too low cut. I know that just by being a young female intern, I could be considered a 'skintern' regardless of my dress; and, my male co-workers will never worry about being reduced to a 'skintern.'"[7]This is basically a blockquote with a tiny amount of rewording
She also felt that it needlessly divided women who should be working together:
Furthermore, labeling someone a "skintern" or "that girl" pits aspiring young professional women against each other. Instead of focusing on how to improve our skills and abilities, we focus on how "trashy" she looks and how much "better" we look. In order for us to not be "that girl," some other "skintern" must be there. As Gloria Steinem famously said, "all women are Bunnies," every young woman on the Hill is a "skintern."[7]
Fashion website The Gloss defended the skintern style in response to Goldstein's 2013 Slate piece. "Surely, I am not the only person who thinks that a 'skintern' sounds like a member of a really cool club," wrote Jennifer Wright. "Skinterns fear nothing. They are truly alive. The air rushes upon their skin whenever someone walks by their cubicle, but they're not chilly, they're fine ... Who would not want to be a skintern!?"[15]
Another response to Goldstein's piece took the opposite view. Elissa Strauss asked if Goldstein's sartorial advice was sexist in a post for "The Sisterhood", The Jewish Daily Forwards blog on women's issues. At first, she granted, it might seem so: "this is set of codes and rules that only apply to young women, or more specifically, their bodies. It told them that some parts of their bodies are considered vulgar and that wearing a pair of high platform heels might give others the wrong idea about their, well, purity. It is putting the responsibility on them to cover up, instead of on men to stop gawking."[16]
"I see the logic here," Strauss admitted, recalling how self-conscious she had felt during puberty as her body started to change, a feeling she did not see shared by any of the young men she knew. "But with all this said, I think there is still a conversation to be had with young women on how to dress, especially in a time when fashion seems almost uniformly inspired by Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman. “I choose-my-choice” feminism sometimes leads women to empowerment, and other times leads them to choose "choices" from a patriarchal or, worse, misogynist culture."[16]
A young female intern wearing a miniskirt and very high heels "might be able to convince herself that these fashion choices are truly her own," Strauss wrote. "More likely, she has absorbed the many ways in which porn and strip-club culture have infiltrated mainstream culture—and what she takes for empowerment is really rooted in the commodification and degradation of female sexuality. Somebody needs to tell her this. They also need to tell her that it is way easier to walk in flats."[16]
See also
[edit]- Dress for Success, 1970s bestseller about ideal attire in a professional setting
Notes
[edit]- ^ Searches on different search engines did not locate any earlier uses.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Stafford, Diane (June 1, 2014). "Summer often means casual work attire, but don't be a flip-flopper or a 'skintern'". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ a b c Goldstein, Katherine (May 14, 2013). "Don't Be a Skintern. What Not to Wear to Your Summer Internship". Slate. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Rothstein, Betsy (June 22, 2005). "The bad rap of Capitol Hill interns". The Hill. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ Allison, Julia (September 26, 2006). "Internizing—Like Womanizing. But Younger". Juliaallison.com. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
The term 'skinterns' has been around for years – they were using that back when I was working on the Hill in 2000-2001.
- ^ a b c d e Rosen, Jill (July 12, 2010). "From booty shorts to belly shirts, some intern fashions make companies cringe". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Canning, Andrea (August 12, 2006). "Skinterns: Shedding Clothes in Hopes of Landing a Job". ABC News. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ a b c "All Young Women on Capitol Hill Are 'Skinterns'". Feministing. February 26, 2010. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ Hume, Mike (August 10–16, 2006). "DC Interns Are Hot and Everyone Wants a Piece of Them". Falls Church News-Press. Falls Church, VA. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
- ^ a b c "Showing off a bit of skin". Washington Times. July 5, 2006. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ Lutz, Monika (June 22, 2012). "Avoiding the Skin-tern, and other Professional Fashion Crimes". GlobaLinksAbroad. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
- ^ Rothman, Lauren (September 1, 2013). "Fashion Whip: 10 Ways to Avoid Becoming a Summer Skintern at Work!". Huffington Post. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
- ^ Yeager, Holly (May 25, 2014). "It's summer in Washington. Don't put your best flip-flop forward". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
- ^ a b Johnson, Jenna (June 28, 2011). "#THATintern: The 'What dress code?' intern". The Washington Post. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
- ^ Korn, Melissa (June 18, 2014). "Where Interns Learn How to Dress". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved August 23, 2015.
- ^ Wright, Jennifer (May 15, 2013). "How To Dress Like A "Skintern"". The Gloss. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
- ^ a b c Strauss, Elissa (May 18, 2013). "Is Fashion Advice for Female Interns Sexist?". The Jewish Daily Forward. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
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