Edith Wharton And The Making Of Fashion

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Edith Wharton and the Making of Fashion

Author : Katherine Joslin
Publisher : UPNE
Page : 230 pages
File Size : 50,7 Mb
Release : 2009
Category : Design
ISBN : 9781584657798

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Edith Wharton and the Making of Fashion by Katherine Joslin Pdf

The origins of the modern fashion industry as seen through the works of Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton in Context

Author : Laura Rattray
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 423 pages
File Size : 54,6 Mb
Release : 2012-10-08
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781107310810

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Edith Wharton in Context by Laura Rattray Pdf

Edith Wharton was one of America's most popular and prolific writers, becoming the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1921. In a publishing career spanning seven decades, Wharton lived and wrote through a period of tremendous social, cultural and historical change. Bringing together a team of international scholars, this volume provides the first substantial text dedicated to the various contexts that frame Wharton's remarkable career. Each essay offers a clearly argued and lucid assessment of Wharton's work as it relates to seven key areas: life and works, critical receptions, book and publishing history, arts and aesthetics, social designs, time and place, and literary milieux. These sections provide a broad and accessible resource for students coming to Wharton for the first time while offering scholars new critical insights.

Teaching Edith Wharton’s Major Novels and Short Fiction

Author : Ferdâ Asya
Publisher : Springer Nature
Page : 331 pages
File Size : 50,5 Mb
Release : 2021-05-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9783030527426

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Teaching Edith Wharton’s Major Novels and Short Fiction by Ferdâ Asya Pdf

This book translates recent scholarship into pedagogy for teaching Edith Wharton’s widely celebrated and less-known fiction to students in the twenty-first century. It comprises such themes as American and European cultures, material culture, identity, sexuality, class, gender, law, history, journalism, anarchism, war, addiction, disability, ecology, technology, and social media in historical, cultural, transcultural, international, and regional contexts. It includes Wharton’s works compared to those of other authors, taught online, read in foreign universities, and studied in film adaptations.

Fashion and Contemporaneity

Author : Laura Petican
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 315 pages
File Size : 54,5 Mb
Release : 2019-01-04
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9789004392250

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Fashion and Contemporaneity by Laura Petican Pdf

This book represents the voices of scholars, fashion designers, bloggers and artists, which speak to the pervasive nature of fashion in matters of politics, history, economics, sociology, religion, art and identity in the twenty-first century.

Modernism, Fashion and Interwar Women Writers

Author : Vike Martina Plock
Publisher : Edinburgh University Press
Page : 256 pages
File Size : 45,6 Mb
Release : 2017-06-12
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781474427432

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Modernism, Fashion and Interwar Women Writers by Vike Martina Plock Pdf

An unprecedented sartorial revolution occurred at the beginning of the twentieth century when the tight-laced silhouettes of Victorian women gave way to the figure of the flapper. Modernism, Fashion and Interwar Women Writers demonstrates how five female novelists of the interwar period engaged with an emerging fashion discourse that concealed capitalist modernity's economic reliance on mass-manufactured, uniform-looking productions by ostensibly celebrating originality and difference. For Edith Wharton, Jean Rhys, Rosamond Lehmann, Elizabeth Bowen and Virginia Woolf fashion was never just the provider of guidelines on what to wear. Rather, it was an important concern, offering them opportunities to express their opinions about identity politics, about contemporary gender dynamics and about changing conceptions of authorship and literary productivity. By examining their published work and unpublished correspondence, this book investigates how the chosen authors used fashion terminology to discuss the possibilities available to women to express difference and individuality in a world that actually favoured standardised products and collective formations.

Fashion and Fiction

Author : Lauren S. Cardon
Publisher : University of Virginia Press
Page : 232 pages
File Size : 50,6 Mb
Release : 2016-04-05
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780813938639

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Fashion and Fiction by Lauren S. Cardon Pdf

During the twentieth century, the rise of the concept of Americanization—shedding ethnic origins and signs of "otherness" to embrace a constructed American identity—was accompanied by a rhetoric of personal transformation that would ultimately characterize the American Dream. The theme of self-transformation has remained a central cultural narrative in American literary, political, and sociological texts ranging from Jamestown narratives to immigrant memoirs, from slave narratives to Gone with the Wind, and from the rags-to-riches stories of Horatio Alger to the writings of Barack Obama. Such rhetoric feeds American myths of progress, upward mobility, and personal reinvention. In Fashion and Fiction, Lauren S. Cardon draws a correlation between the American fashion industry and early twentieth-century literature. As American fashion diverged from a class-conscious industry governed by Parisian designers to become more commercial and democratic, she argues, fashion designers and journalists began appropriating the same themes of self-transformation to market new fashion trends. Cardon illustrates how canonical twentieth-century American writers, including Edith Wharton, Theodore Dreiser, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Nella Larsen, symbolically used clothing to develop their characters and their narrative of upward mobility. As the industry evolved, Cardon shows, the characters in these texts increasingly enjoyed opportunities for individual expression and identity construction, allowing for temporary performances that offered not escapism but a testing of alternate identities in a quest for self-discovery.

Working Women in American Literature, 1865–1950

Author : Miriam S. Gogol
Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield
Page : 186 pages
File Size : 44,6 Mb
Release : 2020-07-07
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781498546799

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Working Women in American Literature, 1865–1950 by Miriam S. Gogol Pdf

Working Women in American Literature, 1865–1950 consists of eight original essays by literary, historical, and multicultural critics on the subject of working women in late-nineteenth- to mid-twentieth-century American literature. The volume examines how the American working woman has been presented, misrepresented, and underrepresented in American realistic and naturalistic literature (1865–1930), and by later authors influenced by realism and naturalism. Points explored include: the historical vocational realities of working women (e.g., factory workers, seamstresses, maids, teachers, writers, prostitutes, etc.); the distortions in literary representations of female work; the ways in which these representations still inform the lives of working women today; and new perspectives from queer theory, immigrant studies, and race and class analyses. These essays draw on current feminist thought while remaining mindful of the historicity of the context. The essayists discuss important women writers of the period (for instance, Ellen Glasgow, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Rachel Crothers, Willa Cather, and the understudied Ann Petry), as well as canonical writers like Theodore Dreiser, Henry James, and William Dean Howells. The discussions touch on a variety of literary and artistic genres: novels, short stories, other forms of fiction, biographies, dramas, and films. In the introductory essay and throughout the collection, the term “working women in the United States” is deconstructed; the historical and cultural definitions of “work,” and the words “work in America” are redefined through the lens of genders.

Reading for Reform

Author : Laura R. Fisher
Publisher : U of Minnesota Press
Page : 402 pages
File Size : 44,9 Mb
Release : 2019-03-05
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781452960364

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Reading for Reform by Laura R. Fisher Pdf

An unprecedented examination of class-bridging reform and U.S. literary history at the turn of the twentieth century Reading for Reform rewrites the literary history of late nineteenth and early twentieth century America by putting social reform institutions at the center of literary and cultural analysis. Examining the vibrant, often fractious literary cultures that developed as part of the Progressive mandate to uplift the socially disadvantaged, it shows that in these years reformers saw literature as a way to combat the myriad social problems that plagued modern U.S. society. As they developed distinctly literary methods for Americanizing immigrants, uplifting and refining wage-earning women, and educating black students, their institutions gave rise to a new social purpose for literature. Class-bridging reform institutions—the urban settlement house, working girls’ club, and African American college—are rarely addressed in literary history. Yet, Laura R. Fisher argues, they engendered important experiments in the form and social utility of American literature, from minor texts of Yiddish drama and little-known periodical and reform writers to the fiction of Edith Wharton and Nella Larsen. Fisher delves into reform’s vast and largely unexplored institutional archives to show how dynamic sites of modern literary culture developed at the margins of social power. Fisher reveals how reformist approaches to race, class, religion, and gender formation shaped American literature between the 1880s and the 1920s. In doing so, she tells a new story about the fate of literary practice, and the idea of literature’s practical value, during the very years that modernist authors were proclaiming art’s autonomy from concepts of social utility.

Fashion and Authorship

Author : Gerald Egan
Publisher : Springer Nature
Page : 352 pages
File Size : 46,5 Mb
Release : 2020-02-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9783030268985

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Fashion and Authorship by Gerald Egan Pdf

Studies of fashion and literature in recent decades have focused primarily on representations of clothing and dress within literary texts. But what about the author? How did he dress? What where her shopping practices and predilections? What were his alliances with modishness, stylishness, fashion? The essays in this book explore these and other questions as they look at authors from the eighteenth century through the postmodern and digital eras, cultural producers who were also men and women of fashion: Alexander Pope, Hester Thrale, Mary Robinson, Lord Byron, William Thackeray, Charlotte Bronte, Wilkie Collins, Margaret Oliphant, Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West, Trudi Kanter, Angela Carter, and Martin Margiela. The essays collected here ultimately converge upon a fundamental question: what happens to our notions of timeless literature when authorship itself is implicated in the transient and the temporary, the cycles and materials of fashion? “Gerald Egan’s provocative introduction to this exciting new book poses a bold question: How are authorship and literature – so often linked to ideas of transcendence – implicated in the transient trends and stuff of fashion? The thirteen chapters that follow track authorship’s complex implication in the discourses and materiality of fashion and fashionable goods from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. Wide-ranging in discipline and chronology, yet forensically focused and carefully argued, this book makes a striking and wonderfully original contribution to studies of authorship, celebrity and material culture.” — Dr Jennie Batchelor, Professor of Eighteenth-Century Studies,University of Kent, UK

Cultures of Femininity in Modern Fashion

Author : Ilya Parkins,Elizabeth M. Sheehan
Publisher : UPNE
Page : 266 pages
File Size : 40,8 Mb
Release : 2012-04-10
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9781611682335

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Cultures of Femininity in Modern Fashion by Ilya Parkins,Elizabeth M. Sheehan Pdf

An interdisciplinary collection illuminating how fashion shaped concepts and practices of femininity and modernity

Feminist Interpretations of Jane Addams

Author : Maurice Hamington
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 356 pages
File Size : 42,9 Mb
Release : 2010-01-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780271036946

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Feminist Interpretations of Jane Addams by Maurice Hamington Pdf

"A collection of articles that address Jane Addams (1860-1935) in terms of her contribution to feminist philosophy and theory through her work on culture, art, sex, society, religion, and politics"--Provided by publisher.

Dressed As in a Painting

Author : Kimberly Wahl
Publisher : UPNE
Page : 241 pages
File Size : 46,6 Mb
Release : 2013
Category : Design
ISBN : 9781611684384

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Dressed As in a Painting by Kimberly Wahl Pdf

The impact of the Aesthetic movement on women and women's fashion

The Touchstone

Author : Edith Wharton
Publisher : Courier Dover Publications
Page : 80 pages
File Size : 48,6 Mb
Release : 2024-03-20
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9780486854106

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The Touchstone by Edith Wharton Pdf

Penniless and unable to marry the woman he loves, the financially struggling lawyer Stephen Glennard discovers a way out of his predicaments by selling love letters written to him by deceased author Margaret Aubyn.

Intellectual Property Rights, Copynorm and the Fashion Industry

Author : Marlena Jankowska
Publisher : Taylor & Francis
Page : 229 pages
File Size : 42,7 Mb
Release : 2023-12-22
Category : Law
ISBN : 9781003833468

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Intellectual Property Rights, Copynorm and the Fashion Industry by Marlena Jankowska Pdf

This book traces the development of the fashion industry, providing insight into the business and, in particular, its interrelations with copyright law. The book explores how the greatest haute couture fashion designers also had a sense for business and that their attention to copyright was one of the weapons in protecting their market position. The work also confronts the peculiarities of the fashion industry as a means of demonstrating the importance of intellectual property protection while pointing out the many challenges involved. A central aim is to provide a copyrightability test for fashion goods based on detailed analysis of the legal regulations in the USA and EU countries, specifically Italy, France, the Netherlands, Germany and Poland. The book will be of interest to researchers and academics working in the areas of Intellectual Property Law, Copyright Law, Business Law, Fashion Law and Design.

Edith Wharton at Home

Author : Richard Guy Wilson
Publisher : The Monacelli Press, LLC
Page : 186 pages
File Size : 42,7 Mb
Release : 2012-09-04
Category : Architecture
ISBN : 9781580933285

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Edith Wharton at Home by Richard Guy Wilson Pdf

The Mount, Edith Wharton’s country place in the Berkshires, is truly an autobiographical house. There Wharton wrote some of her best-known and successful novels, including Ethan Frome and House of Mirth. The house itself, completed in 1902, embodies principles set forth in Wharton's famous book The Decoration of Houses, and the surrounding landscape displays her deep knowledge of Italian gardens. Wandering the grounds of this historic home, one can see the influence of Wharton’s inimitable spirit in its architecture and design, just as one can sense the Mount’s impact on the extraordinary life of Edith Wharton herself. The Mount sits in the rolling landscape of the Berkshire Hills, with views overlooking Laurel Lake and all the way out to the mountains. At the turn of the century, Lenox and Stockbridge were thriving summer resort communities, home to Vanderbilts, Sloanes, and other prominent families of the Gilded Age. At once a leader and a recorder of this glamorous society, Edith Wharton stands at the pinnacle of turn of the twentieth-century American literature and social history. The Mount was crucial to her success, and the story of her life there is filled with gatherings of literary figures and artists. Edith Wharton at Home presents Wharton’s life at The Mount in vivid detail with authoritative text by Richard Guy Wilson and archival images, as well as new color photography of the restoration of The Mount and its spectacular gardens. "The Mount was to give me country cares and joys, long happy rides and drives through the wooded lanes of that loveliest region, the companionship of dear friends, and the freedom from trivial obligations, which was necessary if I was to go on with my writing. The Mount was my first real home . . . its blessed influence still lives in me." —Edith Wharton, 1934