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14 - Beauty Advertising and Advice in the Queen and Woman

from Part III - Women and Visual Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2019

Michelle J. Smith
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer in Literary Studies at Monash University, Australia.
Alexis Easley
Affiliation:
University of St Thomas, Minnesota
Clare Gill
Affiliation:
University of St Andrews
Beth Rodgers
Affiliation:
Aberystwyth University
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Summary

MARGARET BEETHAM HAS likened women's magazines to corsets in that each can serve as an ‘instrument of control and source of pleasure’ (1991: 163). This sense of competing ideologies – between demarcating the bounds of acceptable femininity and enabling a range of fantasies – is especially visible in English women's fashion magazines in the late nineteenth century. In this period, women's magazines transformed substantially: first, because there was a ‘great increase’ in the number of magazines published (Fraser et al. 2003: 171), and second, because of the increased prominence and visual appeal of the advertisements they contained. Though advertising was relatively common in women's magazines, as Beetham and Kay Boardman note, it was not until the 1880s that advertisements began to occupy a greater proportion of each issue and to break out from endpapers and supplements to be interspersed with editorial content (2001: 5). The Queen (1861–1958), for example, which is one of the two periodicals considered in this chapter, gave up half of its pages to advertising by the mid-1880s. Advertising also became more visually spectacular in the late Victorian period, with increasing depictions of products and illustrations of idealised women serving as models to entice the reader to purchase a growing number of brandname beauty products.

In this chapter, I consider how these feminine expectations relating to sexuality and cosmetic advertising and advice were mutually reinforcing. Hilary Fraser, Stephanie Green, and Judith Johnston point out that women's magazines hosted ‘important debates about class and gender,’ but that these ‘were often displaced into discussions relating to the apparently trivial and ephemeral world of fashion’ (2003: 1). In the late Victorian period, the work of femininity, as it was constructed in many illustrated women's magazines, became increasingly tied to knowledge about, purchase of, and correct usage of a variety of consumer goods that might be broadly termed beauty products. Nevertheless, women's fashion magazines were infused with contradictory impulses. In their editorial content, women's magazines often maintained traditional views about the subjects of beauty, cosmetics, and women's dress, frequently advocating ‘natural’ beauty and home-made cosmetics, yet at the same time these magazines relied upon promotion of an extensive variety of beauty commodities and introduced the notion of the beauty regimen.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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