Dressed for success

Beneath the layers of business casual 

Featured in

  • Published 20230801
  • ISBN: 978-1-922212-86-3
  • Extent: 200pp
  • Paperback (234 x 153mm), eBook

When it comes to clothing, all of us are under the influence. Whether you pay minimal attention to what you wear or devote hours to crafting the perfect look, your choices are shaped by trends that are, in turn, guided by broader social and cultural forces. 

One person who knows how to navigate these complex threads is American radio producer and podcaster Avery Trufelman. Since 2018, Trufelman has been examining what we wear in her show Articles of Interest, which explores everything from the history of casual Fridays to the Black, Jewish and Japanese roots of preppy clothing. She talked to Griffith Review editor Carody Culver about the enduring (and ever-shifting) aesthetics of leisurewear and business casual and what they might reveal about our relationship to work and play. This conversation has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

About the author

Avery Trufelman

Avery Trufelman is a podcaster and radio producer based in New York. She presents the podcast Articles of Interest andis the former producer of...

More from this edition

Upping the ante

Non-fictionAs it turned out, Centrebet’s move online – coupled with the many other betting innovations it pioneered – led exactly to where Daffy hoped it would: a prodigious pot of gold. He says the company went from taking ‘fifty or sixty bets in one day’ to taking ‘five or 600,000 bets on a Saturday night from all over the world’. By the turn of the millennium, its annual turnover was in excess of $100 million and it had become – in the words of Piers Morgan, its then general manager – ‘one of the leading sports betting organisations in Australia, if not the world’.

In the fullness of time

Non-fictionOur devices and data are more than extensions of our physical bodies. The so-called ‘human-centric’ approach to designing wearable and carriable devices means that they disrupt traditional divisions between work and leisure, production and consumption. It’s difficult not to feel the incursion of work-logics into leisure times and spaces as normal. Stretched for time, couples, families and friendship groups are starting to organise themselves using tools like Slack, Jira, Trello and Asana – that is, in the same way as workplaces. 

Hump day

Fiction‘Well, I’m sure all your questions will be answered very soon. Genius Inc. is holding a press conference at 3 pm,’ Sam says. ‘The Prime Minister will be there too, since the government is partly funding them now, after their cancer discovery. It’s serious, Prue. Try to have an open mind, alright? Keep your phone close. I’ll call you straight after.’ ‘Sure,’ she yells after him, ‘if we survive it.’

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.