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Material Lives: Women Makers and Consumer Culture in the 18th Century

Autor Serena Dyer
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 feb 2021
Eighteenth-century women told their life stories through making. With its compelling stories of women's material experiences and practices, Material Lives offers a new perspective on eighteenth-century production and consumption. Genteel women's making has traditionally been seen as decorative, trivial and superficial. Yet their material archives, forged through fabric samples, watercolours, dressed prints and dolls' garments, reveal how women used the material culture of making to record and navigate their lives.Material Lives positions women as 'makers' in a consumer society. Through fragments of fabric and paper, Dyer explores an innovative way of accessing the lives of otherwise obscured women. For researchers and students of material culture, dress history, consumption, gender and women's history, it offers a rich resource to illuminate the power of needles, paintbrushes and scissors.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350126961
ISBN-10: 1350126969
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 103 color illus
Dimensiuni: 189 x 246 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.77 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Contributes to material culture, consumption and women's history syllabi, as its structure can be accessed as individual case studies or cited as an interdisciplinary methodological model

Notă biografică

Serena Dyer is a historian of material culture, consumption and fashion. She is Lecturer in History of Design and Material Culture at De Montfort University, UK, an Associate Fellow of the University of Warwick and Postdoctoral Fellow at the Paul Mellon Centre. She was previously Curator of the Museum of Domestic Design and Architecture, London, UK.

Cuprins

List of IllustrationsList of Charts and TablesAcknowledgementsList of Abbreviations1. Introduction: Making Material LivesMaterial Life WritingThe Consumer Culture of MakingFour Material Lives2. Material Accounting: A Sartorial Account BookBarbara Johnson (1738-1825)Educating Barbara JohnsonAccounting for HerselfMaterial LiteracyA Chronicle of Fashion3. Dress of the Year: WatercoloursAnn Frankland Lewis (1757-1842)Sartorial Timekeeping and the Fashion PlateAccomplishment and Creative PracticeSociety and Fashionable DisplaySelfhood, Emotion and the Mourning Watercolours4. Adorned in Silk: Dressed PrintsSabine Winn (1734-1798)Paper Textiles, Dress and the Dressed PrintSabine Winn's Dressed PrintsPrint and Making at Nostell5. Fashions in Miniature: DollsLaetitia Powell (1741-1801)The Powell DollsMimetic Dolls and Miniature SelvesDolls as Sartorial Social Narrators6. Conclusion: Material AfterlivesGlossaryBibliographyIndex

Recenzii

There is something deeply moving about encountering eighteenth-century women via the things they stitched, wore, cut, drew and painted. Richly detailed, evocative and precise - as well as beautifully illustrated - Material Lives has much in common with the intricate, creative women's work that Dyer studies in this book.
Serena Dyer's lavishly illustrated and brilliantly researched book calls for us to rethink the immense cultural power of the "needles, brushes, glue and scissors" that four Georgian women used to fashion new versions of history. It is a compelling read.
A meticulous, insightful and intimate reconstruction of how four genteel women recorded and memorialized their lives through 'material life writing' ... [and] a compelling vision of women's engagement in the eighteenth-century world of goods as knowledgeable, skilful and creative makers.
This splendid book portrays the unforgettable world of female imagination, skill and artistic talent that shaped consumer identity in the eighteenth century.
Material Lives offers a brilliant re-evaluation of eighteenth-century women's lives through their craft practices. Organised around four rich case studies, Dyer's book eloquently questions the presumed primacy of the textual archive and models an innovative interdisciplinary methodology that has far-reaching repercussions for the study of women's history.