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Frock Consciousness: Writing about Clothes from the London Review of Books

Frock Consciousness: Writing about Clothes from the London Review of Books

Jenny Diski
3.7/5 ( ratings)
‘I don’t know when I’ll be going, but at least now I know what I’ll be wearing.’ – Elaine Showalter

Virginia Woolf coined the phrase ‘frock consciousness’ in January 1925. Speculating in her diary about women and their clothes, she wrote: ‘my love of clothes interests me profoundly only it is not love; and what it is I must discover.’ It took history a long time to catch up with Woolf’s insights. In the 1980s, binary opposites – left and right, modernism and postmodernism – had yet to lose their grip, and a subject as delicate as the meaning of clothes could not easily get a purchase. ‘Nobody who feels superior to fashion can write well about it,’ Angela Carter observed in the LRB in 1985. Eventually, the brakes came off and the chorus became, instead, ‘yes, but is it art?’ It is, this collection concludes – but it’s also much more interesting than that.

Featuring: Joanna Biggs, Anita Brookner, Angela Carter, Jenny Diski, Rosemary Hill, Anne Hollander, Kevin Kopelson, David Nasaw, Elaine Showalter, Alice Spawls and E.S. Turner.
Language
English
Pages
104
Format
Paperback

Frock Consciousness: Writing about Clothes from the London Review of Books

Jenny Diski
3.7/5 ( ratings)
‘I don’t know when I’ll be going, but at least now I know what I’ll be wearing.’ – Elaine Showalter

Virginia Woolf coined the phrase ‘frock consciousness’ in January 1925. Speculating in her diary about women and their clothes, she wrote: ‘my love of clothes interests me profoundly only it is not love; and what it is I must discover.’ It took history a long time to catch up with Woolf’s insights. In the 1980s, binary opposites – left and right, modernism and postmodernism – had yet to lose their grip, and a subject as delicate as the meaning of clothes could not easily get a purchase. ‘Nobody who feels superior to fashion can write well about it,’ Angela Carter observed in the LRB in 1985. Eventually, the brakes came off and the chorus became, instead, ‘yes, but is it art?’ It is, this collection concludes – but it’s also much more interesting than that.

Featuring: Joanna Biggs, Anita Brookner, Angela Carter, Jenny Diski, Rosemary Hill, Anne Hollander, Kevin Kopelson, David Nasaw, Elaine Showalter, Alice Spawls and E.S. Turner.
Language
English
Pages
104
Format
Paperback

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