117.21 Morning Post: owned
by Lady Bathurst, this was a publication of the extreme right, which had
published violent anti-Semitic propaganda in 1920. Peter Walsh exaggerates
Richard Dalloway's conservatism; he reads The Times. Cf. Woolf’s account
of her paper-reading habits: “I have changed the Daily News for the Morning
Post. The proportions of the world at once become utterly different. The M.P.
has the largest letters & the double column devoted to the murder of Mrs
Lindsay; anglo Indians, Anglo Scots, & retired old men & patriotic
ladies writer letter after letter to deplore the state of the country; applaud
the M.P., the only faithful standard bearer left” (D 2.127; 10 August 1921). Lady
Ottoline Morrell announced her daughter’s (unsuccessful) social debut in the Morning Post. Cf. L 3.180: “Not a single
party has Julian [Morrell] been asked to, though they put a notice in the
Morning Post.” See also Mansfield’s story “The Dove’s Nest,” in which a female
character consults The Morning Post
in hopes of finding suitable conversation topics for a male luncheon guest
(249). Woolf glanced at the Mansfield volume in June 1923 (D 2. 247-8).
Monday, October 31, 2011
Thursday, October 27, 2011
NYPL Exhibit A Century of Art: 1926 “What London Wears,” Attributed to Mabel Thérèse Bonney
Thérèse Bonney during WWII, via Library of Congress |
On Saturday, I participated in a the first of two panel discussions in support of the wonderful new exhibit at the
NYPL, A Century of Art. Part of the larger centenary of the Schwarzman building
on 42nd and 5th, this exhibit displays one print or
photograph from the collection for each year, from 1911 to 2011. As a scholar
affiliated with the Wertheim Study, I was invited to speak on one image and I
chose an amazing fashion photograph from 1926. I don’t have permission to show
you the picture, but I thought you might be interested in my description of it
and of what it signifies. The second panel, in which five additional scholars
speak for ten minutes each on five other prints or photographs will be on Friday,
December 9, 2011, 2 - 3:30 p.m. It’s a lovely, friendly format, so do you’re
your calendars and go!
When Jay
Barksdale sent around the list of images to be included in this exhibit, I knew
immediately that, if I were to speak, it would be on this image, although I
didn’t see it until last week. After all, it’s an image made by a woman, about
fashion, from 1926, and my current project is a textual edition of Virginia
Woolf’s 1925 novel Mrs. Dalloway, a novel about an upper class London
woman who goes shopping and throws a party. But when I saw the image, I gasped
with shocked delight. Not having known her work before, how could I have
guessed that Thérèse Bonney had created an image that captures at once a very
specific moment in women’s fashion and, at the same time, would be at home in a
window at Sak’s today?
My expertise is
not photography or fashion, but literature and history, and, in the brief time I
have today, I want to talk about the caption, the photo, and a little bit about
the photographer itself. I should say
here that, as the prints department is not even 100% sure of the artist, I do
not know the source or author of the caption, nor where, if anywhere, this
image originally appeared. The full caption is an amazing bit of 1920s
fashion writing:
What London wears—The continental way of being economical—Rubbers for legs—fold into a dainty little package and easily left in escort’s coat pocket. Ingenious way of keeping silk stockings clean.
For copywriters in the 1920s, as today, London prides itself on being glamorous,
signaled here by the word “continental,” and practical. What London wears is,
in fact, not from London at all, but an import from Europe. However, cautious
Londoners need not fear—these rubber stocking covers are economical as well. As
high fashion as the photograph is, the caption itself brings us squarely into
the world of advertising. The rest of the caption flirts with sexuality.
“Rubber” as slang for a condom goes back to 1913 but it has been chiefly North
American slang. Still, the idea of sex, of the ways in which we clothe our
bodies to conceal and reveal possibilities of intimacy, hovers throughout this
silly little bit of prose. The caption contains within it the narrative of a
date: these removable little stocking covers slip off and into a pocket, but
not your pocket, your date’s. The image of a young woman, balancing on
one leg, her hand, perhaps, on her escort’s shoulder for balance, as she
unclasps the three hooks on each rubber, folds them into their “dainty little
package,” and hands them to him for safekeeping would have been impossible
before the war. And then, the next line, “ingenious way of keeping silk
stockings clean,” implies that the same daring woman who would wear these
rubbers is also one who worries about her laundry. This is a modern woman,
sexy, confident, and living on her own. She is like T. S. Eliot’s typist, home
at teatime, her drying combinations strewn about her flat. She is not like the
protagonist of Dorothy Richardson’s 1915 novel Pilgrimage, a young
boarding school teacher who worries, in a panic, about how to do her hair, for
it’s still wet from having been forced to shampoo it just before dinner.
The idea of galoshes as dangerously contintental, as a French letter
for the feet, shows up in a wonderful scene from James Joyce’s 1914 story, “The
Dead”:
"O, but you'll never guess what he makes me wear now! … Galoshes!" said Mrs. Conroy. "That's the latest. Whenever it's wet underfoot I must put on my galoshes. Tonight even, he wanted me to put them on, but I wouldn't. The next thing he'll buy me will be a diving suit."Gabriel laughed nervously and patted his tie reassuringly, while Aunt Kate nearly doubled herself, so heartily did she enjoy the joke. The smile soon faded from Aunt Julia's face and her mirthless eyes were directed towards her nephew's face. After a pause she asked:"And what are goloshes, Gabriel?""Goloshes, Julia!" exclaimed her sister "Goodness me, don't you know what goloshes are? You wear them over your... over your boots, Gretta, isn't it?""Yes," said Mrs. Conroy. "Guttapercha things. We both have a pair now. Gabriel says everyone wears them on the Continent."
Gretta Conroy’s
last remark—that everyone wears them on the Continent—is the beginning of an
end for her husband Gabriel who, over the course of the evening, will be
exposed for preferring Europe to Ireland, for being in danger of being left
behind, both by his wife’s memories of a boy from the West and by his female
colleague’s commitment to the Irish language and the Irish Free state. The
rubbers of 1914 are not the same as the ones shown here.
Galoshes do not
figure in Mrs. Dalloway, but another kind of tube for the extremities
does: gloves. The original first line of Mrs. Dalloway was not “Mrs. Dalloway
said she would buy the flowers herself” but “Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy
the gloves herself.” And the 1923 short story “Mrs. Dalloway in Bond Street”
which began Woolf’s serious return to Clarissa Dalloway as a possible
protagonist (She had been a minor character in an earlier work) contains an
extended meditation on the decline of gloves since the war. In that story,
Clarissa’s preoccupation with gloves is part of the sharper satire on her—she’s
a much less sympathetic figure in the story than in the novel—so, she thinks
“It would be intolerable if dowdy women came to her party!” and then wonders
“Would one have liked Keats if he had worn red socks?” Woolf uses Keats, a
great poet revered across England, as a crucial barometer: the notion that
one’s opinion of a poet might alter if his socks were not quite so is as
shallow to Woolf’s ears as to ours. So when, in the next paragraph, Clarissa
forges a connection with the shop girl over the old gloves, “With pearl
buttons… perfectly simple—how French!,” we are reminded of how a certain kind
of woman still judges others’ value by the correctness of her accessories.
For Joyce,
galoshes are a way that a middle-aged husband protects his wife from a chill.
For Woolf, gloves are a sign of a middle-aged wife’s continuing care for
propriety. The rubbers that London wears in this 1926 photograph are something
else entirely. And to turn from the ways in which Joyce and Woolf ironize the
bourgeois preoccupations of the prior generation to Bonney’s photograph is to
suddenly feel a breath of fresh air, to feel the breathing room that modernity
opened up for women.
If
the caption flirts cloyingly, the photograph itself is less shy. It is also
art. We see a pair of long, slim legs, crossed just above the ankle, in
medium-heeled Mary Janes, with a button strap. The strap and the opening of the
shiny black shoes are piped with a thin strip of leather in a paler shade. The
spat-like galoshes hook under the heel and fasten three times in the front,
leaving large gaps up the shin between buttons. The rubbers hardly look like a
practical solution to walking in rainy streets. Surely the splash of a mud
puddle is as likely to hit the front of a leg as the back. In Woolf’s short
story, Mrs. Dalloway remembers how “old Uncle William used to say” that “A lady
is known by her gloves and her stockings” (26). That old saw, still current
today, about the telling signs of a woman’s accessories, applies here in ways
that might shock Clarissa, for the story that these rubbers tell is not about
class or breeding but about modern glamour.
One of the most
important facts about these rubbers is how they remind us that this London
woman is no longer wearing dresses down to her ankles. Her skirts would have
come down just below her knees and her legs are now on display. But the display
itself participates in a distinctively twenties aesthetic. The overall effect
is glamorous rather than practical. Both sexy and abstract, the rubbers create
three additional pale ovals up the white leg, echoing the oval created by the
strap itself. If you go to the gallery upstairs, you’ll see that next to this
photograph, the Delaunay print, representing 1924, and the Man Ray photograph
representing 1925 both feature studies of circles and curved forms. The
designer of these rubbers, the model, and Thérèse Bonney have collaborated to
create in three dimensions, on a woman’s leg, a design that echoes the clean
lines and pure shapes of avant garde art of the period.
In her recent
book Glamour in Six Dimensions Judith Brown argues that the world of glamour and of high modernism are not so far
apart. We should not, she insists, see a divide between consumerism and art,
but notice instead a shared aesthetic delight in abstract forms and clean
lines. The Bonney photograph absolutely participates in the phenomenon that
Brown describes and it’s an exciting reminder of how fast the world was
changing in 1926: just the year before, Woolf published a novel in which
Clarissa laments that her daughter doesn’t care about gloves, but now, that
lament is tinged with a kind of pride. At the party, one of Clarissa’s elderly
guests notes to herself how the young girls’ gowns are short, tight, and
straight, a look she finds unflattering. And the very next year time, in Paris,
designers are making rubbers to market to the modern Londoner so she can
protect her stockings and show off her legs.
The photographer is presumed to be Mabel Thérèse Bonney (limited access link, sorry) and, as I have learned in the past few days, she is very much
worth more of our attention. Bonney was born in Syracuse in 1894. Educated at the
University of California, and Harvard, she earned a doctorate at the Sorbonne.
During the 1920s, she and her sister published a series of books about French
cooking and fashion for American and English readers and this photograph looks
to be part of that phase of her career as a photographer: gorgeous editorial
fashion work.
She returned to New York in 1935 to become director of the new Maison
Française, a gallery in Rockefeller
Center dedicated to fostering better cultural understanding between France and
the United States. That work
sent her back to Europe and, while in Finland in November 1939 to photograph
preparations for the 1940 Olympic
Games, she instead became the only photojournalist at the scene of the
Russian invasion of Finland. Her war photography was exhibited at the Library of Congress and published in books as War Comes to
the People (1940) and Europe’s Children (1943). Her concept for a film about children displaced by war became the Academy
Award- winning movie, The Search (1948). She died in France in 1978.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Baron Marbot's Memoirs, a footnote examined
This footnote, so far, gathers information that's been available in many other editions of Mrs. Dalloway, so I'm not presenting it to you as a sign of my research. Instead, it's an occasion to think about the choices every editor must confront. Here is the draft note as I have it:
48.23-24 Baron Marbot's Memoirs: Jean Baptiste Antoine Marcelin, Baron de Marbot (1782-1854), French general who accompanied Napoleon on his disastrous retreat from Moscow in 1812. A. J. Butler translated his memoirs into English in 1892 (3 vols.), with an abridged, one-volume, version appearing in 1893, and a new version in 1897.Looking at it yesterday, I deleted a comment that I had previously accepted from another editor, to the effect that Clarissa is likely reading from the abridgment. Why? How on earth might we guess that she is reading the abridged Marbot? The whole point of her reading is that she sleeps alone, doesn't have an intimate relationship with her husband anymore and, all in all, prefers about reading about a humiliating, (and frigid) Napoleonic defeat. If you're choosing Marbot over intimacy, why not go for the three volume version?
Monday, October 24, 2011
Rolling turf. Draft footnote of the day
44.6 rolling his strip of turf Mr. Bentley
is tending to his lawn with a roller, a metal drum with an axle through the
center leading up to a handle. Rollers smooth the lawn's surface and are
frequently used on cricket pitches, golf courses, and formal gardens to insure
perfectly even grass. Woolf’s narrator is shooed off such a lawn in Oxbridge in
A Room of Own’s Own (1929).
Not sure about the description of the roller itself. Any suggestions, gentle readers?
Sunday, October 23, 2011
The Serpentine. Draft footnote of the day.
I am still here. I still exist. I have more substance than a tweet--barely--I'm just striving to make a 1/31/12 deadline for Dalloway and that makes me a little batty.
16.1 Serpentine The Serpentine is the lake in Hyde Park, formed in 1730
by the damming of the River Westbourne. Hyde Park, another of the major Royal
Parks, appropriated by Henry VIII (1536), and site for carriage drives by the wealthy.
Hyde Park lies to
the west of Clarissa's route. For Clarissa’s memory of throwing a shilling into
the Serpentine, see 277.17. In
1903, Woolf wrote a short sketch about a woman who committed suicide by jumping
into the Serpentine. See also her letter to Violet Dickinson, 22 May 1922: “you’ll
tell me I’m a failure as a writer, as well as a failure as a woman. Then I
shall take a dive into the Serpentine” (L 1.499).
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Cura: A new journal of art and action
Late last spring, a group of Fordham students got
together with Sarah Gambito, our Director of Creative Writing. They were
frustrated that all the work they were doing on the student literary journal
resulted in a pretty little booklet that sat in stacks on the radiators of our
building, ignored. How could they convey their passion for art and their desire
to change the world in ways that would touch other people?
Lots of brainstorming, conversations, coding, and a
few visits to Zuccotti Park later, and Cura
is the result. I’ve been tweeting about this for a while, but I haven’t written
about it here.
Cura is going to be an online
magazine, available on Kindle and with a number (how many? we’re not sure yet)
of print editions. Four times a year, we’ll publish a prompt, each one related
to the theme, and select the best art—fiction, poetry, photography, or any new
media that can be displayed on a website—we get in response. The students write
the prompt and they’re also writing the Muse, the blog that riffs on that
prompt.
Our theme is Home.
Our first prompt is “What does your white picket
fence keep out? And what has slipped in?”
Our first deadline is October 17th.
But that’s not all. We are committed to art and
action and with the theme of home we’ll be hosting some fundraising events to
benefit Covenant House, a nonprofit that benefits homeless youth. Any money we
make from sales of the print journal will go to Covenant House, too.
We are so excited about this! I am super proud to
play a small role as a faculty advisor. I hope that you’ll pass the call for
submissions to all your friends, that you’ll submit your work, and that you’ll
come back at the end of the month and read what we’ve put together.
Monday, October 10, 2011
Draft footnote of the day: Lady Bexborough
Lady Desborough |
Lady Bexborough who opened a bazaar, they said, with the telegram in her hand, John, her favourite, killed.
9.23 Lady Bexborough
The name recalls the Countess of Bessborough (1761-1821; born Lady Frances
Henrietta Spencer), a celebrated Regency hostess, confidant of Lord Byron, and
mother to Lady Caroline Lamb (1785-1828). It also rhymes with that of Lady
Desborough (1867-1952), a prominent Edwardian hostess and intimate friend of
many Prime Ministers of the period. Her resemblance, both physically and in
manner to an eighteenth-century hostess was widely remarked. Two of Lady
Desborough’s sons were killed in WWI (See EN 9.24) See (D 3.37; 20 July 1925): “Sometimes
a buttery crumb of praise is thrown me—‘Lady Desborough admires your books
enormously—wants to meet you.’”
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