We live in an era where exploring gender fluidity is welcomed and praised with the likes of Harry Styles and Yungblud challenging gender-norms. Music and high fashion come hand in hand but do they have the power to socially shift constructions and expectations of gender? Madonna's 1989 album ‘Like A Prayer’, challenged social norms through fashion, challenging male misogyny and a woman’s position in a male's life through wearing outerwear as underwear with the likes of Jean Paul’s Gaultier cone-bra, impacting the third-wave feminist movement. Whilst the cone-bra enhanced and brought attention to Madonna’s breasts, the spiked design represented a weapon, allowing women to challenge the idea that these feminine features weaken them, and instead offer them greater power dismantling the idea that strong women are simply men-hating ‘bra burners’ but rather championing the idea that to be strong and own your body is sexy. In his December 2020 cover of Vogue, Harry Styles became the...