2013
DOI: 10.1017/s1060150313000132
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Death Becomes Her: On the Progressive Potential of Victorian Mourning

Abstract: On the occasion of her Golden Jubilee, Queen Victoria was depicted in a woodcut by William Nicholson that was to become extremely popular (Figure 1). So stout that her proportions approach those of a cube, the Queen is dressed from top to toe in her usual black mourning attire, the white of her gloved hands punctuating the otherwise nearly solid black rectangle of her body. Less than thirty years later, another simple image of a woman in black would prove to be equally iconic: the lithe, narrow column of Chane… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…There is an ambiguity that surrounds the figure of the widow, one that acknowledges her vulnerability but also a form of power that can destabilize taken-for-granted social mores. Mitchell (2013) describes how Victorian widows were expected to adhere to strict codes of behavior and dress. Yet they were sexually experienced, and many middle-class widows were economically independent and in control of their destiny, which was unusual at the time for women.…”
Section: Representations Of the Widowmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is an ambiguity that surrounds the figure of the widow, one that acknowledges her vulnerability but also a form of power that can destabilize taken-for-granted social mores. Mitchell (2013) describes how Victorian widows were expected to adhere to strict codes of behavior and dress. Yet they were sexually experienced, and many middle-class widows were economically independent and in control of their destiny, which was unusual at the time for women.…”
Section: Representations Of the Widowmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…94 Black had become de rigueur in mourning dress, but Rebecca Mitchell reminds us to explore non-normative mourning. 95 There was a blending of colours being used. Green was used in other meetings too, including one in Idle near Bradford where crapes were worn on the women's hats for mourning in combination with green ribbons for hope.…”
Section: Embodying and Dressing Radicalism: The Power Of Materials Cu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During the Victorian era, widows used the mourning black dress in fashionable ways. In explaining the fashion of the black dress of widowhood, Mitchell (2013) quotes Sarah Ellis who explains that the widow's black dress during the Victorian era was used as both a:…”
Section: Black Dress As a Colour Of Resistancementioning
confidence: 99%