While this brought Smith’s gender fluid style to the mainstream, he’d been spotted challenging fixed gender norms before including when he wore a dress to his high-school prom.
When asked by Nylon magazine where he gets the confidence to keep pushing societal boundaries he said:
“You just have to believe in yourself, you know. The world is going to keep bashing me for whatever I do and I’m going to keep not caring.
“I’m going to take most of the blows for my fellow MSFTS [his brand]. So you know, in five years when a kid goes to school wearing a skirt, he won’t get beat up and kids won’t get mad at him. It just doesn’t matter,” he said. “I’m taking the brunt of it so that later on, my kids and the next generations of kids will all think that certain things are normal that weren’t expected before my time.”Smith is one of several high-profile individuals challenging gender stereotypes by publicly styling themselves however they wish and rejecting the premise that certain items of clothing are restricted to one gender.
Ruby Rose has spoken openly about identifying as
gender fluid while the rapper Young Thug, who last year told GQ ,“90 per
cent of my clothes are women’s”, recently starred in a campaign for
Calvin Klein where he proclaimed there to be “no such thing as gender”.
“In my world, you could be a gangsta with a dress, or you could be a gangsta with baggy pants. I feel like there’s no such thing as gender,” he said.
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