Author Aesthetic: Virginia Woolf

Author Aesthetic: Virginia Woolf

Something many may not know about Virginia Woolf is that she had a fondness for clothing. During the 1920s, fashion was changing for women, prioritizing comfort with looser cuts, dropped waistlines, raised hemlines, and more affordable materials such as jersey were becoming more widely used. Virginia Woolf embraced this increase in selection for women. She even considered “frock consciousness” to be one of the many states of consciousness we all have: “My present reflection is that people have any number of states of consciousness: & I should like to investigate the party consciousness, the frock consciousness.” She further explained this state of consciousness in Orlando when she wrote concerning clothing: “They change our view of the world and the world’s view of us.” So “frock consciousness” was the “impact that clothes have on both our inner and outer states of being.”

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Author Aesthetic: Emily Brontë

Author Aesthetic: Emily Brontë

Welcome to a new series to my blog: Author Aesthetic. If you’re subscribed to my newsletter, you’ll know I’ve been recently intrigued by the Brontë sisters — more specifically, Emily. Since there’s not much out there about the Brontë sisters because of their early deaths, I became more curious about their personalities and what they were really like, considering the novels and poems they produced. Then I thought: I wonder what they would be like if they were alive now. I wonder what any author who isn’t alive now would be like. So I thought it would be fun/interesting to research each author to get a better grasp on how their personalities and interests would translate today. This is all just for fun and to occupy my curious mind. Hope you enjoy this new series!

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