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Fashion and Women's Attitudes in the Nineteenth Century (Dover Fashion and Costumes) (Hardcover)

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Description


The nineteenth century, according to C. Willett Cunnington, was a period when the cult of modesty was a tactical maneuver camouflaged as a virtue. It was also a period when euphemisms were used for such terms as naked, breast, and leg, and when underclothing was vaguely spoken of as lingerie.
Cunnington, an early twentieth-century authority on fashion, argues that the Victorian matron was governed as much by current popular style as she was by instinct and custom. In a light, amusing, and highly readable account, he not only describes what Englishwomen wore in the nineteenth century but also explains why they clothed themselves as they did.
Enlivened with extracts from novels; correspondence from the columns of ladies' magazines; fashion descriptions and period advertisements of beauty aids; the volume traces changes in feminine dress and ideas decade by decade through the 1800s. The importance of being in fashion and the longing to imitate -- in appearance -- those in the same social group is closely examined, as is the desire to be sexually attractive and its counter-effort -- to conceal sexual features.
A carefully researched work on a fascinating subject, this volume will appeal to a wide audience, encompassing feminists, sociologists, fashion historians, and costume designers.

Product Details
ISBN: 9780486788616
ISBN-10: 048678861X
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication Date: December 20th, 2013
Pages: 352
Language: English
Series: Dover Fashion and Costumes