Consumptive Chic: A History of Beauty, Fashion, and Disease
Autor Professor Carolyn A. Dayen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 dec 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350141186
ISBN-10: 1350141186
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 43 colour and 64 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350141186
Pagini: 208
Ilustrații: 43 colour and 64 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
First book to explore connections between fashion and consumption neglected in the histories of tuberculosis
Notă biografică
Carolyn Day is Assistant Professor at Furman University, South Carolina, USA.
Cuprins
Introduction 1. The Approach to Illness2. The Curious Case of Consumption: A Family Affair 3. Exciting Consumption: The Causes and Culture of an Illness4. Morality, Mortality, and Romanticizing Death 5. The Angel of Death in the Household6. Tragedy and Tuberculosis: The Siddons Story7. Dying to Be Beautiful: The Consumptive Chic8. The Agony of Conceit: Clothing and ConsumptionEpilogue: The End of Consumptive ChicConclusionBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
A well-researched and diligently compiled cultural history of tuberculosis.
Drawing on medical treatises, beauty manuals, fashion periodicals, and other literature of the period, this thoroughly researched and erudite work will satisfy those interested in social and cultural history.
I enjoyed learning more about the historical development of the disease ... very well written, with substantial attention to detail.
[Carolyn] Day's monograph is a valuable addition to our understanding of just how a disease as overdetermined as consumption plays out across different discourses that constitute a particular social world: in this case, the period roughly covering 1780-1850.
At its best, the book is an innovative and well-researched effort to explore how the apparently meaningless ebb and flow of aesthetic tastes is linked to a larger epidemiological and discursive contexts.
Consumptive Chic fuses medical, social, appearance and fashion histories into a fascinating, challenging story about the disease-ridden shadows behind idealized feminine beauty between 1785 and 1850.
Impeccably researched and beautifully executed, Consumptive Chic tells the surprising, wholly engrossing story of how a wretched disease became both fashionable and aesthetically pleasing. This is a relentlessly intelligent study, one that will find a wide and admiring audience.
Consumptive Chic strips the beauty myths of tuberculosis down to the corset. She takes us on an emotional journey, using the slim, pale, and pathetic lives of women sufferers in the early 19th century to explain why many found the look so appealing. It is an illuminating and chastening read.
Beautifully illustrated, Consumptive Chic weaves together the histories of fashion and medicine to chart the symbolic import of the female tubercular body. Day mobilizes an impressive range of primary materials to illuminate the rise of consumption as a fashionable malady, in spite of - or perhaps owing to - its devastating effects.
Drawing on medical treatises, beauty manuals, fashion periodicals, and other literature of the period, this thoroughly researched and erudite work will satisfy those interested in social and cultural history.
I enjoyed learning more about the historical development of the disease ... very well written, with substantial attention to detail.
[Carolyn] Day's monograph is a valuable addition to our understanding of just how a disease as overdetermined as consumption plays out across different discourses that constitute a particular social world: in this case, the period roughly covering 1780-1850.
At its best, the book is an innovative and well-researched effort to explore how the apparently meaningless ebb and flow of aesthetic tastes is linked to a larger epidemiological and discursive contexts.
Consumptive Chic fuses medical, social, appearance and fashion histories into a fascinating, challenging story about the disease-ridden shadows behind idealized feminine beauty between 1785 and 1850.
Impeccably researched and beautifully executed, Consumptive Chic tells the surprising, wholly engrossing story of how a wretched disease became both fashionable and aesthetically pleasing. This is a relentlessly intelligent study, one that will find a wide and admiring audience.
Consumptive Chic strips the beauty myths of tuberculosis down to the corset. She takes us on an emotional journey, using the slim, pale, and pathetic lives of women sufferers in the early 19th century to explain why many found the look so appealing. It is an illuminating and chastening read.
Beautifully illustrated, Consumptive Chic weaves together the histories of fashion and medicine to chart the symbolic import of the female tubercular body. Day mobilizes an impressive range of primary materials to illuminate the rise of consumption as a fashionable malady, in spite of - or perhaps owing to - its devastating effects.