Abstract
That an advertisement onfashionable clothing should reference a novel which ostensibly satirizes the world of fashion is not as striking as it seems. It points toward the affinity between clothes/body making and novel/book production, an affinity widely attested to in contemporary literature. An 1836Court Magazinepiece, for instance, puts it like this:FASHION in books may now be said to fluctuate as frequently as fashion in bonnets, and a monthly commentary on the changes in literarymodes, might just as well be circulated as a periodical magazine of fashion in dress. We might express ourselves thus: – “One of the metropolitan publishers has introduced elegantnoveltiesin the way of townprints, produced with small neatplates, judiciousgatherings, and a becomingbinding. . . .” (“The Vicissitudes of a Silver Tea-Pot” 68)For this writer and many others, book production and bonnet making can be talked about in very many of the same terms – modes, novelties, prints, plates – not the least because they are underwritten by the same language, or rather subjected to the same rule, of “FASHION.” Fashion – mostly but not always with a capitalized F and tautologically conceived of as that which makes it fashionable – has become such a paradigmatic driving force in modern England that anti-fashion functions as the shortest, most direct route to be in: an advertising strategy deployed by companies like Moses and Son in a rhetoric that makes full use of the fluidity of language to circulate everything back to the magnetic space constituted by polar opposites.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Cultural Studies
Reference132 articles.
1. Fashionable Gaieties of the Week;The Court Journal,1830
2. Where Is the Fashion;The Court Journal,1832
3. Fashionable World, The;The Morning Post,1852
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1. Recent Dickens Studies: 2018;Dickens Studies Annual;2020-03-01