MAPACA

Mid-Atlantic Popular &
American Culture Association

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Fashion, Appearance and Material Culture: The Function and Mission of Advertising in the Historical Context

Presenter: 
Damayanthie Eluwawalage (Albright College)
Presentation type: 
Paper
Abstract: 

This paper explores the nature of the texts and images associated with advertising, including commercial images, artistic and literary representations, photographs and postcards, the printed word and the visual arts in the fashion and clothing context.

Advertising became an increasingly important aspect of retailing through the eighteenth and into the nineteenth century, not least as the range of printed media steadily expanded. The Victorian advertisement exposes materialistic fantasies. It tells of goods that excited the imagination and of mundane realities of everyday life. Fashion advertisements during the mid-nineteenth century were small and not more than a price list or itemized inventory, but by the late 1880s, illustrated advertisements were clearly amongst the most visually arresting in the Victorian periodical press. The illustrated fashion advertisements would have been available to a cross-section of society. Women were the primary audience for most nineteenth-century advertisements. Advertisements and related notices in the newspapers and magazines about clothing and finery were a invaluable resource for women. The advertisement became both mirror and instrument of the social ideal. It was possible to create the illusion of the ‘perfect lady’, a beacon of Victorian affluence, via advertisements. Such advertisements would suggest fringes to improve the coiffure, corsets to mould the female figure, baby food which closely resembled human milk in composition, and matching soap for the hands and complexion.

Scheduled on: 
Saturday, November 5, 1:15 pm to 2:30 pm

About the presenter

Damayanthie Eluwawalage

Damayanthie Eluwawalage, PhD, MPHA, earned her doctorate in Design and History from Edith Cowan University in Australia. She also holds a BA (Honours First-class) in Design from Curtin University of Technology, Australia. She is an Assistant Professor at Albright College, Pennsylvania, United States and a Professional Historian who specializes in costume history. Her research interests include interdisciplinary design, design theory, social history, aviation/space history (she holds a Private Pilot License), costume history, and fashion/aesthetic theory.

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