Black Patriotic Fashion in Central Europe: Warsaw, 1861-1866

This article focuses on fashion as a tool of research and reflection of social, cultural and political processes and of various transnational influences in a nineteenth century European city. It highlights the way in which the Polish “People’s Mourning” fashion or “Black Fashion” turned into a femal...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inZeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung Vol. 72; no. 2; pp. 165 - 193
Main Author Novikov, Anna
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Marburg Herder Institute Publisher 2023
Verlag Herder-Institut
Herder-Institut
Verlag Herder Institut
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Summary:This article focuses on fashion as a tool of research and reflection of social, cultural and political processes and of various transnational influences in a nineteenth century European city. It highlights the way in which the Polish “People’s Mourning” fashion or “Black Fashion” turned into a female tool of protest against the Russian government before and after the Polish January Uprising 1863-1864. It also traces in what mean the creation of certain visual images of the self can reflect not only the daily life of female patriot inhabitants of Warsaw, but rather the process of transformation of local and international political and social ideals into material culture (i.e. attire and accessories). The article focuses both on the visual importance of the items which were related to the mourning fashion, and on the martyrological and eschatological messages, imprinted in the patriotic female mourning attire in the second half of the nineteenth century. Finally, I analyze the political role of this sartorial phenomenon, its philosophical and ideological message both on the personal and public level as well as its transnational connections.
ISSN:0948-8294
2701-0449
DOI:10.25627/202372211340