Sneakers - Giugno 6, 2018

Shattered Backboards: Women, Sneakers, and a History of Activism

Kevin Kosanovich

Kevin holds a Ph.D. in American studies and is an expert in American cultural history and hip-hop. He is the Senior Content Manager at StockX.

Women’s Sneaker History and Activism

The first modern sneakers designed specifically for women were released in 1982, as the result of labor activism.

During the 1980 Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) strike in New York City, 33,000 MTA employees shut down New York City’s subway and bus lines for 11 days. From April 1 through April 11, more than 3 million commuters were forced to find alternative means to get to work. Businesswomen walking to work in their power suits and sneakers became emblematic of the strike. 

MTA 1980: The Original Suits-and-Sneakers Fit // WWD

Reebok looked to this moment of labor strife and designed the Reebok Freestyle. The Freestyle was just one example of a longer confluence between women, consumer habits, fashion, and labor activism. Throughout the early 20th century, urban, working-class women deployed the nascent, modern ready-to-wear clothing industry as a tactic of their labor protests. During the 1909 Shirtwaist Factory Strike, working-women wore their ready-to-wear fashions to very publicly claim their femininity while expanding notions of who women were, what they could do, and the rights they deserved. 

Reebok Freestyle, 1982 // Reebok

Sneakers, and the sneaker industry, represent another front in the longer war over gender equity. Perhaps sneakers will be the battle that leads to lasting change.

Female Athletes and Sneakers

The 1920s marked the first time women publicly participated in sports and leisure culture. As a result, women’s athletic footwear tried to toe the line between form and function by combining rubber soles to heeled shoes to maintain women athletes’ femininity. Following this moment in women’s sneaker history, little happened involving women and sneakers.

In fact, since the 1920s, “footwear endorsed [and worn] by female athletes has had little to no impact on sneaker culture . . . the majority of the most coveted sneakers are not made in women’s sizes, to the frustration of female aficionados,” according to the Brooklyn Museum’s exhibition, “The Rise of Sneaker Culture.”   

During the same decade, the Converse All Star heralded a new era in men’s athletic sneakers. Originally released in 1917, Chuck Taylor joined the Converse company in 1921 as a salesman/basketball evangelist and spread the gospel of the Converse All Star around the country. Taylor was so successful that Converse added his signature to the shoe’s ankle patch in 1932, forever after branding the shoe the Chuck Taylor All Star. Following the “Chuck Taylor,” it would be almost another forty years before the modern, signature sneaker emerged.

shattered backboard women sneaker history WNBA maya moore

1925 “Sneakers” //Hal Roth/American Federation of Arts/Bata Shoe Museum

shattered backboard women sneaker history WNBA maya moore

Converse All Star, circa the early 1920s // Converse

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1971, adidas officially re-branded their tennis shoe as the “Stan Smith,” named after American tennis player Stan Smith, and released the first basketball player-endorsed sneaker, “The Jabbar,” worn by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. These first signature shoes paved the way for the Air Jordan line beginning in 1985, and the contemporary sneaker market and culture. It wouldn’t be until the 1990s that a woman athlete would receive a signature sneaker. 

Where are the women athletes in this sneaker history?

Sheryl Swoopes received the first women’s athlete signature shoe in 1995, with the launch of the Nike Air Swoopes. This also marked the second time Nike released an athlete’s signature shoe, the Air Jordan being the first. The Air Swoopes would see yearly releases until the final model, the Air Swoopes Premier, was released in 2002. Nike recently announced an Air Swoopes 2 retro, to be released fall 2018.  

shattered backboard women sneaker history WNBA maya moore

Nike Air Swoopes 1 //Nike

shattered backboard women sneaker history WNBA maya moore

Air Swoopes 2 //Sole Collector

 

 

 

 

 

 

During its initial retail run, the Air Swoopes line was inspiring for a generation of women basketball players. Current WNBA star Elena Delle Donne told Rolling Stone that, “I didn’t even care what they looked like. I just heard that her [Sheryl Swoopes] shoes were out and available and I knew I needed to have them. For me, it was just the fact that I was able to wear a pro women’s basketball player’s shoes and not always have to wear the men’s.” 

Not surprisingly, Donne’s Nike React Hyperdunk 2017 was released in a red, black, and white colorway in homage to the Air Swoopes 1.

From 1995 until 2012, Nike, adidas, Fila, and Reebok all released signature shoes for WNBA players including Lisa Leslie, Cynthia Cooper, Rebecca Lobo, Nicki McCray, Dawn Staley, and Chamique Holdsclaw. In 2011, Maya Moore became the first female basketball player to sign with Nike’s Jordan Brand. Since signing, several Moore-inspired retro Jordans have been released, including a May 2018 Air Jordan 11 low, called the “Rook to Queen,” celebrating her first WNBA championship. However, Moore has yet to receive the signature treatment.

New Activists, Same Cause

Like the WNBA stars who came before them, women skateboarders are also demanding sneaker and gender equity.

In fall 2017, Nike SB announced its first line of skate shoes designed exclusively for women, the Nike SB Bruin High. Nike SB pro skater Lacey Baker said that previous to the Nike SB Bruin High she, “used to look up how to modify [her] shoes on the internet so that [she] could make them fit better.”

Following Nike SB’s initial shoe announcement, Lacey Baker was tapped to help create the first women’s skateboarder-designed edition of the Nike SB Bruin High. Released in February 2018, the Nike SB Bruin High x Lacey Baker featured contrasting eye designs on the heels to signify visibility for marginalized groups. As a vocal proponent for LGBTQ equality, Baker’s model points to the commonplace marginalization and invisibility women and the LGBTQ community face through underrepresentation in mainstream media.  

From labor strikes, WNBA signature shoes, women skateboarders, to sneakers designs, women in sneakers have always been pushing against restrictive social, cultural, and political gender norms. Perhaps now, more than ever.   Â