Textiles, Fashion, and Design Reform in Austria-Hungary Before the First World War: Principles of Dress

Author:   Rebecca Houze
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138548213


Pages:   472
Publication Date:   25 April 2018
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Textiles, Fashion, and Design Reform in Austria-Hungary Before the First World War: Principles of Dress


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Author:   Rebecca Houze
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   1.680kg
ISBN:  

9781138548213


ISBN 10:   1138548219
Pages:   472
Publication Date:   25 April 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

'This is a beautifully written, wide-ranging study of the central role that textiles, fashion and costume played in the cultural history of the Habsburg Empire of the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.' Julie M. Johnson, University of Texas, San Antonio, USA 'In this inspiring new study, Rebecca Houze builds on her series of excellent articles ... which deal with Austrian and Hungarian applied arts at the turn of the century ... the achievement of this book is to provide a fascinating new approach to the area through the vehicles of textiles, fashion and dress reform.' Reviews in History ""Drawing on a wide variety of contemporary sources and extensive illustrations, and underpinned by sustained, carefully articulated arguments, this book makes a convincing case that notwithstanding the problematics of dress and design reform in Austria and Hungary during the Dual Monarchy, 'clothing motivated programs of change… Throughout the book, the range of sources and illustrations, careful argument, confident style, and the synthesis of fashion, costume, and textiles located within the wider context of design reform ensures that this book is an excellent contribution to scholarship in the field.'"" Journal of Design History ""A landmark contribution to [Ashgate’s] new series on material culture and collecting, Houze’s meticulously researched study is essential to those interested in textiles, late nineteenth-cenntury design reform, and the second-class status of decorative and fashionable within modernist value systems…. [The book] brims with detailed analysis of institutional developments and late nineteenth-century ethnographic exhibitions previously familiary only to specialists, amply supporting the author’s thesis that a performative culture of dress fueled questions of national identity and design reform in Dual Monarchy."" West 86th


'This is a beautifully written, wide-ranging study of the central role that textiles, fashion and costume played in the cultural history of the Habsburg Empire of the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.' Julie M. Johnson, University of Texas, San Antonio, USA 'In this inspiring new study, Rebecca Houze builds on her series of excellent articles ... which deal with Austrian and Hungarian applied arts at the turn of the century ... the achievement of this book is to provide a fascinating new approach to the area through the vehicles of textiles, fashion and dress reform.' Reviews in History Drawing on a wide variety of contemporary sources and extensive illustrations, and underpinned by sustained, carefully articulated arguments, this book makes a convincing case that notwithstanding the problematics of dress and design reform in Austria and Hungary during the Dual Monarchy, 'clothing motivated programs of change... Throughout the book, the range of sources and illustrations, careful argument, confident style, and the synthesis of fashion, costume, and textiles located within the wider context of design reform ensures that this book is an excellent contribution to scholarship in the field.' Journal of Design History A landmark contribution to [Ashgate's] new series on material culture and collecting, Houze's meticulously researched study is essential to those interested in textiles, late nineteenth-cenntury design reform, and the second-class status of decorative and fashionable within modernist value systems.... [The book] brims with detailed analysis of institutional developments and late nineteenth-century ethnographic exhibitions previously familiary only to specialists, amply supporting the author's thesis that a performative culture of dress fueled questions of national identity and design reform in Dual Monarchy. West 86th


'This is a beautifully written, wide-ranging study of the central role that textiles, fashion and costume played in the cultural history of the Habsburg Empire of the late-nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.' Julie M. Johnson, University of Texas, San Antonio, USA 'In this inspiring new study, Rebecca Houze builds on her series of excellent articles ... which deal with Austrian and Hungarian applied arts at the turn of the century ... the achievement of this book is to provide a fascinating new approach to the area through the vehicles of textiles, fashion and dress reform.' Reviews in History Drawing on a wide variety of contemporary sources and extensive illustrations, and underpinned by sustained, carefully articulated arguments, this book makes a convincing case that notwithstanding the problematics of dress and design reform in Austria and Hungary during the Dual Monarchy, 'clothing motivated programs of change... Throughout the book, the range of sources and illustrations, careful argument, confident style, and the synthesis of fashion, costume, and textiles located within the wider context of design reform ensures that this book is an excellent contribution to scholarship in the field.' Journal of Design History A landmark contribution to [Ashgate's] new series on material culture and collecting, Houze's meticulously researched study is essential to those interested in textiles, late nineteenth-cenntury design reform, and the second-class status of decorative and fashionable within modernist value systems.... [The book] brims with detailed analysis of institutional developments and late nineteenth-century ethnographic exhibitions previously familiary only to specialists, amply supporting the author's thesis that a performative culture of dress fueled questions of national identity and design reform in Dual Monarchy. West 86th


Author Information

Rebecca Houze is Associate Professor of Art History at Northern Illinois University, USA.

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