Throughout the period 1860–1914, British Quaker women sought to negotiate the incorporation of fashionable attire into their wardrobes to varying degrees, after the religion’s hierarchy made prescriptive religious ‘Plain’ dress optional in 1860. After centuries of restrictive Advices, which used scripture alongside peer pressure to encourage female Friends to dress ascetically, Quaker women began to interpret their new sartorial freedoms in diverse ways. Through the presentation of three female case studies from across the period, this article will suggest three newly identified distinct stances that Quaker women enacted in responding to the new Advice and adapting to fashionable ensembles, up until the devastating events of the First World...
By the second half of the eighteenth century, women ministers had become the principal upholders of ...
Changing economic, political and social pressures throughout history have impacted the way human bei...
Historians of the early British women\u27s movement have frequently drawn connections between the th...
This paper examines the relationship between the prescription and practice of nineteenth century Bri...
From the 1670s, British members of The Religious Society of Friends, better known as Quakers, develo...
This paper will examine the sartorial negotiations made by two female members of the British Quaker ...
Studies of Quaker costume have always been hampered by a general lack of visual evidence and fragmen...
From the garments that they made to the ways that they spoke, Quakers grappled with the outward trap...
For your further delectation: a new essay on the website by Hannah Rumball on an 1843 Quaker wedding...
Religion has been largely overlooked in the study of clothing trades and fashion consumerism in the ...
Participation in popular, or worldly, culture was a moot point for the early Friends. Although they ...
In the first part of this paper I explore the possibility of identifying a Quaker aesthetic through ...
Killerton House National Trust houses over 20,000 garments in its rich dress collection, many of the...
The presence of Quaker women at the founding of a social movement for women\u27s rights in Britain i...
The town of Newcastle in the early nineteenth century offered many diverse forms of entertainment an...
By the second half of the eighteenth century, women ministers had become the principal upholders of ...
Changing economic, political and social pressures throughout history have impacted the way human bei...
Historians of the early British women\u27s movement have frequently drawn connections between the th...
This paper examines the relationship between the prescription and practice of nineteenth century Bri...
From the 1670s, British members of The Religious Society of Friends, better known as Quakers, develo...
This paper will examine the sartorial negotiations made by two female members of the British Quaker ...
Studies of Quaker costume have always been hampered by a general lack of visual evidence and fragmen...
From the garments that they made to the ways that they spoke, Quakers grappled with the outward trap...
For your further delectation: a new essay on the website by Hannah Rumball on an 1843 Quaker wedding...
Religion has been largely overlooked in the study of clothing trades and fashion consumerism in the ...
Participation in popular, or worldly, culture was a moot point for the early Friends. Although they ...
In the first part of this paper I explore the possibility of identifying a Quaker aesthetic through ...
Killerton House National Trust houses over 20,000 garments in its rich dress collection, many of the...
The presence of Quaker women at the founding of a social movement for women\u27s rights in Britain i...
The town of Newcastle in the early nineteenth century offered many diverse forms of entertainment an...
By the second half of the eighteenth century, women ministers had become the principal upholders of ...
Changing economic, political and social pressures throughout history have impacted the way human bei...
Historians of the early British women\u27s movement have frequently drawn connections between the th...