Skip to content

Fashion and Material Culture in Victorian Fiction and Periodicals

Janine Hatter Nickianne Moody

New Paths in Victorian Literature and Culture series, No.1

This attractively illustrated new collaborative work examines dress, style and performance as a significant pleasure of fiction. It illuminates many significant factors of Victorian life.

The book examines the ways in which Victorian writers, illustrators, periodicals, designers and clothing manufacturers have critiqued the social ideologies inherent in dress, fashion and imaginative engagement with clothes.

 

This is the first volume in the New Paths in Victorian Popular Fiction and Culture series being published by EER. The series comprises specially commissioned work based on innovative or under-researched perspectives on Victorian literature and culture.

 

As an aesthetic medium, fashion expresses a person’s life course, their ideas, desires and beliefs, and fiction itself is a site where these issues can be resolved.

 

Not only were fictional characters made recognisable through their dress, but readers of serial fiction encountered them in between adverts, cartoons, print and patterns. Thus, how dress is depicted in fiction responds to its material paratext.

 

Victorian dress and literature equally licensed or discouraged particular forms of clothing, fantasies and moralities about men and women, as well as distinctions between generations. As a result, this volume’s multidisciplinary approach engages with theoretical perspectives on dress history, periodical publications, archives and dress.

 

The book is shaped in four distinct sections. Writers engage with fashion and material culture using an interdisciplinary methodology, as well as through fashion’s multiple performances as depicted in text, image and design.

 

Part 1, ‘Fashion and Hierarchies of Knowledge’ examines how periodicals, journalism and couture established ‘fashion’ as a discipline.

 

Part 2’s ‘Artistic Engagement with Fashion’s Material Culture’ focuses on how fabric, printed patterns and illustrations critique social constructions of beauty and femininity.

 

Part 3, ‘Conduct and Clothing’, considers novelistic depictions of fashion with regard to scientific, racial and gender identities. These are cross-related to reader consumption and behaviour.

 

Part 4, ‘Consumption and Fashionable Performance’, examines periodicals, genres and drama as performative in their own right.

 

 

Contents:  

Introduction – Nickianne Moody: Vivacity, Narrative and the Fashion Plate.


 1. Fashion and Hierarchies of Knowledge. a. Royce Mahawatte: The Dandy Novel as Fashion Text: Edward Bulwer Lytton’s Pelham (1828) and Fashion Editorial. b. Alyson Hunt: Fashioning Modernity in Fin-De-SiècleSerialised Crime Fiction. c. Barbara Vrachnas: ‘Fin de Siècle Worth’: Charles Frederick Worth in Victorian Fiction and Periodicals.

 

2. Artistic Engagement with Fashion’s Material Culture. a. Elaine Andrews: ‘The Puzzle of our Heroine’s Character’: Fashionable Beauty and Interiority in the Late Juvenilia of Charlotte Brontë. b. Carolyn Ferguson: A Weave of Words: Fabric, Print and Pattern in the Mid-Nineteenth-Century Novel. c. Kara Tennant: ‘Buying in Style’ Sartorial Sensibilities and Victorian Popular Fiction.

 

3. Conduct and Clothing. a. Melissa Dickson: Hats, Cloaks, and Stethoscopes: Symbolic Fashions of the Nineteenth-Century Medical Practitioner. b. Robin Barrow: Mutinous Dress: Victim-Blaming in the 1857 Indian Rebellion. c. Eleanor Fitzsimons: Wilde Words and ‘Monstrous Fashion’

 

4. Consumption and Fashionable Performance. a. .Janine Hatter: Fashioning Fiction: The Consumption of Mary Braddon’s Belgravia: A London Magazine.  b. A Luxx. Mishou: ‘It was impossible that such a creature could be feminine’: Fashioning Villainy and the Language of the Grotesque in Gothic Fiction. c. Madeleine Seys: ‘Muslins, Confidences and Illicit Conversations’: Fashioning Transgressive Femininities in George Moore’s A Drama in Muslin (1886).