Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books

Using a corpus of 40 influential conduct books published in Italy in the long nineteenth century, we apply current insights in the role of values for the emergence and maintenance of conventions developed within the pragmatics of politeness to the prescriptive discourse on fashion, because in these...

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Main Authors: Annick Paternoster, Francesca Saltamacchia
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Seismo Verlag 2019-05-01
Series:Studies in Communication Sciences
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-9c3ce2b0027c4469a8dfb901590617232021-07-30T10:29:30ZdeuSeismo VerlagStudies in Communication Sciences1424-48962296-41502019-05-01182287306https://doi.org/10.24434/j.scoms.2018.02.006Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct booksAnnick Paternoster0Francesca Saltamacchia1USI - Università della Svizzera italiana, Istituto di Studi ItalianiUSI - Università della Svizzera italiana, Istituto di Studi ItalianiUsing a corpus of 40 influential conduct books published in Italy in the long nineteenth century, we apply current insights in the role of values for the emergence and maintenance of conventions developed within the pragmatics of politeness to the prescriptive discourse on fashion, because in these sources norms for verbal and non-verbal behaviour are justified in a similar way. We argue that fashion choices are always said to communicate moral values. Most conduct books reinforce fashion norms by anchoring them in moral values because the authors expect their readers to be morally evaluated in terms of the clothes they wear. We will give an overview of rules regulating bodily hygiene, adornment, dress choice and fashion, and analyse which values are explicitly cited to justify the rules. The positive values such as diligence and parsimony show that fashion morality is seen as a means of self-improvement for the petty bourgeoisie whilst excesses (avarice and laziness on one end and vanity and frivolity on the other) lead to poverty. Our sources predominantly regulate fashion with personal, ego-centered values. This is markedly different from the current debate on sustainable fashion, led by social values such as compassion and altruism. With this historical paper we hope to contribute to the discussion of new approaches for the analysis of moralising discourse in fashion communication.moralityvaluesconventionsitalylong nineteenth centuryconduct booksethical fashion
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annick Paternoster
Francesca Saltamacchia
spellingShingle Annick Paternoster
Francesca Saltamacchia
Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
Studies in Communication Sciences
morality
values
conventions
italy
long nineteenth century
conduct books
ethical fashion
author_facet Annick Paternoster
Francesca Saltamacchia
author_sort Annick Paternoster
title Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
title_short Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
title_full Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
title_fullStr Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
title_full_unstemmed Il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: Fashion morality in Italian nineteenth-century conduct books
title_sort il vestito forma la persona – “clothes make the man”: fashion morality in italian nineteenth-century conduct books
publisher Seismo Verlag
series Studies in Communication Sciences
issn 1424-4896
2296-4150
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Using a corpus of 40 influential conduct books published in Italy in the long nineteenth century, we apply current insights in the role of values for the emergence and maintenance of conventions developed within the pragmatics of politeness to the prescriptive discourse on fashion, because in these sources norms for verbal and non-verbal behaviour are justified in a similar way. We argue that fashion choices are always said to communicate moral values. Most conduct books reinforce fashion norms by anchoring them in moral values because the authors expect their readers to be morally evaluated in terms of the clothes they wear. We will give an overview of rules regulating bodily hygiene, adornment, dress choice and fashion, and analyse which values are explicitly cited to justify the rules. The positive values such as diligence and parsimony show that fashion morality is seen as a means of self-improvement for the petty bourgeoisie whilst excesses (avarice and laziness on one end and vanity and frivolity on the other) lead to poverty. Our sources predominantly regulate fashion with personal, ego-centered values. This is markedly different from the current debate on sustainable fashion, led by social values such as compassion and altruism. With this historical paper we hope to contribute to the discussion of new approaches for the analysis of moralising discourse in fashion communication.
topic morality
values
conventions
italy
long nineteenth century
conduct books
ethical fashion
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