Abstract
This article will consider how dress, textiles, manuscripts and images in the Thomas Hardy Archive illuminate his writing and reveal the accuracy of his descriptions of clothing in novels including Far from the Madding Crowd and Tess of the D'Urbervilles. Rural clothing, fashionable styles, drawings and illustrations will shed new light on his writing through providing an insight into the people's dress he described so eloquently in his writing. The textiles and clothing in the Archive are also significant as nineteenth-century working-class dress is relatively rare. Everyday rural clothing does not tend to survive, so a collection belonging to Hardy's family of country stonemasons provides new opportunities for research in this area. Even more unusual is clothing reliably provenanced to famous people or writers, and such garments that do exist tend to be from the middle or upper classes. This article will show how the combination of surviving dress, biographical context and literary framework enriches understanding of Hardy's words and informs research into nineteenth-century rural dress.
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Subject
History,General Business, Management and Accounting
Reference37 articles.
1. The Trumpet-Major, published in 1880, provided the earliest setting for one of Hardy's novels, c. 1804, during the time of the Napoleonic Wars. Hardy's final full-length novel, Jude the Obscure, was published in 1895 and set between 1880 and 1894.
2. Clothing the Landscape: Change and the Rural Vision in the Work of Thomas Hardy (1840–1928)
3. Thomas Hardy's `Facts' Notebook, ed. by William Greenslade (Abingdon: Routledge, 2016), p. xviii.
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