Fr. 75.60

Fashioned From Penury - Dress As Cultural Practice in Colonial Australia

English · Paperback / Softback

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Klappentext This 1994 book reveals the broader historical and cultural implications of clothes in Australia for the first time. Zusammenfassung This 1994 book reveals the broader historical and cultural implications of clothes in colonial Australia. It shows that dress was central to the ways class and status were negotiated and the marking out of sexual differences. It helped define morality! the relationship between Europeans and Aboriginal people! and between convict and free. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; Part I. Penal Dress 1788¿1840: 1. Irregular patterns: government and the social order; 2. Fraying at the edges: clothing supplies and manufacturing; 3. A cut above: fashion, class and power; 4. On the fringe: clothing and Aboriginal/Colonial relations; Part II. Colonial Dress: 5. Dressing the part: urban codes - class and gender; 6. From a different cloth: etiquette and social practice; 7. Material needs: supply and demand; Part III. An Australian Distinctiveness: 8. A loose fit: emigration and adaption; 9. Alternative threads: perceptions and stereotypes; 10. Rough and ready made: bush dress and the mythology of the 'real' Australian; Appendices; Bibliography.

Product details

Authors Margaret Maynard, Margaret (University of Queensland) Maynard
Publisher Cambridge University Press ELT
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.1994
 
EAN 9780521459259
ISBN 978-0-521-45925-9
No. of pages 248
Series Wye Studies in Agricultural an
Subjects Guides > Health > Beauty/cosmetics
Humanities, art, music > History > Regional and national histories

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