Dress, Distress and Desire 2005
DOI: 10.1057/9780230508200_4
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Re-clothing the Female Reader: Dress and the Eighteenth-Century Magazine

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“…In Designing Women, Tita Chico (2005) argued that the dressing room becomes a powerful metaphor in literature which emerged during the late seventeenth and eighteenth century, changing from 'a site of lasciviousness and secrecy for aristocratic women to an emblem for good and virtuous mothers' (p. 9). Following a similar analytical trajectory, Jennie Batchelor (2005) investigates the literary inferences of the growing emphasis on 'sentiment' and 'sensibility' during the eighteenth century. She explains in Dress, Distress and Desire that dress and fashion became crucial tropes for both critics and supporters of the growing trade and commercial sectors during the eighteenth century (p. 7).…”
Section: Fashion Gendered Politics and Wolf Hallmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Designing Women, Tita Chico (2005) argued that the dressing room becomes a powerful metaphor in literature which emerged during the late seventeenth and eighteenth century, changing from 'a site of lasciviousness and secrecy for aristocratic women to an emblem for good and virtuous mothers' (p. 9). Following a similar analytical trajectory, Jennie Batchelor (2005) investigates the literary inferences of the growing emphasis on 'sentiment' and 'sensibility' during the eighteenth century. She explains in Dress, Distress and Desire that dress and fashion became crucial tropes for both critics and supporters of the growing trade and commercial sectors during the eighteenth century (p. 7).…”
Section: Fashion Gendered Politics and Wolf Hallmentioning
confidence: 99%