{"id":869,"date":"2015-10-10T12:27:48","date_gmt":"2015-10-10T11:27:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/?p=869"},"modified":"2015-10-10T12:27:48","modified_gmt":"2015-10-10T11:27:48","slug":"representations-of-fashion-in-1785","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/2015\/10\/10\/representations-of-fashion-in-1785\/","title":{"rendered":"Representations of Fashion in 1785"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>The <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/2015\/02\/11\/purses-productivity-and-a-pastorella-past-her-prime\/\">discourses on fashion in the <em>Lady\u2019s Magazine<\/em><\/a> (1770-1832) are, <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/2015\/04\/27\/patterns-and-posterity-or-whats-not-in-the-ladys-magazine\/\">as we have seen<\/a>, complex and multifaceted. While I have discussed some of the ways fashion appears in the magazine previously, in today\u2019s post I would like to draw attention to the representation of fashion in three distinct genres: the serial novel, the opinion piece, and the advice column.<a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.01.10.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\" wp-image-873 alignright\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.01.10.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-10 at 11.01.10\" width=\"379\" height=\"326\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.01.10.png 946w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.01.10-300x258.png 300w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.01.10-624x537.png 624w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 379px) 100vw, 379px\" \/><\/a> My decision to give a brief overview of how fashion appears within these three genres is precisely because of the difficulties a researcher or reader would find in attempting to reconcile its representations across the genres. This is, of course, also true within genres; different serial novels offer sharply divergent opinions on social issues central to the magazine\u2019s readership; likewise readers would receive distinctly dissimilar guidance depending on the authorship of an advice column. Nonetheless, by examining fashion across the genres rather than within one, it is possible to gain a better understanding of 1) the competing forms that discourses appeared in within the periodical and 2) how the eighteenth-century reader would have experienced these divergent representations.<\/p>\n<p>Fashion is merely one subject among hundreds that could be used to demonstrate this point, but it is a subject of perpetual fascination to me because of how discussions of it are consistently bound of with debates on morality, modernity, gender and sexuality.<\/p>\n<p>The anonymously authored serial novel <em>The Dangers of Dissipation <\/em>(1783-85) features a first-person narrator, Maria Wilding, who is a pleasure-seeking young lady whose tendency towards <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.17.41.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"wp-image-877 alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.17.41.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 14.17.41\" width=\"265\" height=\"466\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.17.41.png 370w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.17.41-171x300.png 171w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 265px) 100vw, 265px\" \/><\/a>dissipation (as the title indicates) puts her in dangerous situations, and who is most fond of admiration. This propensity carries on after she is married to the highly moral Mr. Wells, and causes her some mortification in the countryside when her fashionable dress renders her the object of ridicule rather than admiration to the local rustics, who she: &#8216;more than once, caught laughing at the length of my braided hair, and my train drawing a yard after me on the ground; and often heard them say, they would rather, a thousand times, chuse a girl with a round ear&#8217;d cap, and her hair cut short in her neck, in a close jacket and petticoat&#8217;\u00a0<em>LM\u00a0<\/em>XVI [August 1784]: 412.<\/p>\n<p>But in spite of Maria\u2019s dangerous desire to be admired, when she almost loses her husband\u2019s regard entirely after he finds her in a compromising (though not guilty) position, she realizes that it is his love and esteem that are most important. Her husband pretends to flirt with another woman to make her jealous, and it is around a cap that this plot point and the novel culminate. Maria is assisting Miss Gataker at her toilet one day before they go out when her husband enters with \u2018a new-fashioned hat [. . .] trimmed with lace and ribbon, in a very elegant taste, and presented it to Miss Gataker, desiring her leave to put <a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.28.28-e1444472093120.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\" wp-image-880 alignright\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.28.28-e1444472093120.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 14.28.28\" width=\"312\" height=\"188\" \/><\/a>it on himself\u2019 (<em>LM <\/em>XVI [January 1785]: 32). Maria is naturally very upset at her husband\u2019s behaviour but especially when his friend, sir William, suggest that Mr. Wells give the cap to Maria and Mr. Wells replies \u2018it will not become her\u2019 (<em>LM <\/em>XVI [January 1785]: 32). Immediately after this Mr. Wells finally relents and confesses that both his flirtation with Miss Gataker and sir William\u2019s repeated profession of love to Maria have been ruses to test her fortitude and fidelity.<\/p>\n<p>In the same issue, the Matron\u2019s advice column [link] features an anecdote revolving around her cousin, Miss Partlett. Miss Partlett consistently dresses too young for her age, and Mrs. Grey just as frequently attempts to advise her against her fashion selections. In this column, Miss Partlett is \u2018sallying forth\u2019 in in a very fashionable ensemble featuring \u2018an enormous feather\u2019 that Mrs. Grey\u2019s daughter attempts to reason with her, stating that propriety, not feathers, \u2018render a woman worthy of esteem\u2019 and that \u2018every attempt that she makes to look younger than she really is, will have quite an opposite effect: it would only serve to make her more conspiculously ancient [. . .] Feathers, in the manner many young women wear them, put one too much in mind of funeral ornaments, upon the head of an old woman. They can make us think of nothing else, indeed, but a hearse\u2019 (<em>LM <\/em>XVI [January 1785]: 27).<em>\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.37.30.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"wp-image-881 size-full alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.37.30-e1444472246345.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 14.37.30\" width=\"279\" height=\"398\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.37.30-e1444472246345.png 279w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.37.30-e1444472246345-210x300.png 210w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 279px) 100vw, 279px\" \/><\/a><\/em><\/p>\n<p>This is not the first time, or the last, that the Matron weighs in against older women dressing too young for their age. Her concern is not with fashionable attire in general; in other installments she compliments the expensive and beautiful dresses that her grandson\u2019s wife wears, and she admires the elegant simplicity with which her granddaughter Sophia dresses. But the showy and cheap satin <em>deshabille<\/em> that her other granddaughter wears, and the age-inappropriate attire of Miss Partlett attract her censure. That is to say, it is not fashionable or modern styles in themselves, but inelegant or inappropriate choices that do not suit the wearer against which the Matron advises; becoming and stylish fashions that are genteel and elegant rather than tawdy or modish are always advised.<\/p>\n<p>A serial opinion piece, rather wonderfully titled \u2018One of the Leading Causes of Prostitution: The Dress of Servant Girls above their Stations\u2019 appears in 1785 as well, and, though the writer claims not to want to usurp the place of the Mat<a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.11-e1444474133529.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"size-full wp-image-883 alignright\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.11-e1444474133529.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 14.56.11\" width=\"380\" height=\"250\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.11-e1444474133529.png 380w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.11-e1444474133529-300x197.png 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 380px) 100vw, 380px\" \/><\/a>ron in giving advice to the magazine\u2019s readers, she must offer her opinion on the profligacy and depravity of women who become prostitutes. Two\/thirds of these women, the writer claims (though offers perhaps unsurprisingly no source for this statistic) were previously servants. The cause of prostitution for these former servants is, the writer argues, \u2018pride, and a desire of appearing out of their proper sphere\u2019 (<em>LM <\/em>XVI [February 1785]: 96). Indeed, one of the most vexatious consequences of dressing beyond one\u2019s rank is not a life of prostution (and consequently degradation, disease, squalor, unwanted pregnancy and early death): no, this writer finds the real disastrous effect is that it is no longer\u00a0\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.111.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"wp-image-884 size-full alignleft\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.111-e1444474203529.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 14.56.11\" width=\"372\" height=\"176\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.111-e1444474203529.png 372w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-09-at-14.56.111-e1444474203529-300x142.png 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 372px) 100vw, 372px\" \/><\/a>\u2018possible to judge people\u2019s rank by their exterior; but now all propriety is banished, and one is momentarily in danger of mistaking a modern mop-squeezer for a capital tradesman\u2019s wife\u2019 (<em>LM <\/em>XVI [February 1785]: 27).<\/p>\n<p>The serial continues with anecdotes and purportedly true stories for another two installments and is ultimately signed by \u2018Annabella Evergreen\u2019. It continues to blame servant girls for almost every ill known to humanity, including their own seductions by honest and innocent sons of the families for which they work. The rhetoric is fascinating and I highly recommend it. But what\u2019s so interesting about its location in the magazine and its pointed nod to the Matron is that this opinion piece that masquerades as a moral essay would likely not have pleased the Matron, who offers a much more moderate view and is very empathetic to the plight of the less fortunate.<\/p>\n<p>The genre of the miscellany necessitates that there is always a vexed relationship between how the various genres represent discourses, almost regardless of topic. Yet by probing these distinct treatments, it is possible to see that the magazine, while in one instance seemingly<br \/>\nreactionary and in the next radical, tends to offer an overall liberal treatment of the social issues that were of such interest to its readership.\u00a0What makes it so fruitful to look at one topic across a range of genres within a given year, or within a given genre across a range of years, is that the variety and shifts in opinions and view represented within the periodical are given their voice again. The magazine&#8217;s multiple dialogues &#8212; \u00a0between the genres as well as between the contributors to the different genres and columns &#8212; requires\u00a0reading these conversations and their engagement with the contemporary social and cultural concerns in order to understand the otherwise seemingly disjointed and competing discourses.<a href=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.50.09.png\"><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"alignnone size-full wp-image-886\" src=\"http:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.50.09.png\" alt=\"Screen Shot 2015-10-10 at 11.50.09\" width=\"983\" height=\"488\" srcset=\"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.50.09.png 983w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.50.09-300x149.png 300w, https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/files\/2015\/10\/Screen-Shot-2015-10-10-at-11.50.09-624x310.png 624w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 983px) 100vw, 983px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Jenny DiPlacidi<\/p>\n<p>University of Kent<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The discourses on fashion in the Lady\u2019s Magazine (1770-1832) are, as we have seen, complex and multifaceted. While I have discussed some of the ways fashion appears in the magazine previously, in today\u2019s post I would like to draw attention to the representation of fashion in three distinct genres: the serial novel, the opinion piece, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":39798,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/869"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/39798"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=869"}],"version-history":[{"count":10,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/869\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":888,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/869\/revisions\/888"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=869"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=869"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/blogs.kent.ac.uk\/ladys-magazine\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=869"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}