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- Title
Fashioning Michael Field: Michael Field and Late-Victorian Dress Culture.
- Authors
Parker, Sarah
- Abstract
This article explores how the late-Victorian poets Katharine Bradley and Edith Cooper, who wrote under the collaborative pseudonym Michael Field, used fashionable dress to construct and advertise their unique poetic identity. Using evidence from their journal Works and Days, I contextualise Bradley and Cooper's clothing in terms of late-Victorian dress culture, and the major dress reform movements of the nineteenth century. I demonstrate that Bradley and Cooper used fashion as a distinctively feminine way of participating in aesthetic culture, marking significant life events, and to advertise their poetic identity. This self-fashioning also exposed them to aesthetic scrutiny from their peers Oscar Wilde and Bernard Berenson. Finally, I argue that fashion played a crucial role in Bradley and Cooper's desire for one another – and that this desire can be understood in terms of erotic reciprocity.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; VICTORIAN Period, Great Britain, 1837-1901; CLOTHING &; dress; EVENING gowns; COOPER, Edith Emma, 1862-1913; BRADLEY, Katharine Harris, 1846-1914; FIELD, Michael, pseud.; FASHION; 19TH century aesthetics; NINETEENTH century; HISTORY of clothing &; dress
- Publication
Journal of Victorian Culture, 2013, Vol 18, Issue 3, p313
- ISSN
1355-5502
- Publication type
Essay
- DOI
10.1080/13555502.2013.783413