Wearing and Burying Death: Fashion, Mourning, and Public Displays of Death
The first section highlights the commodification of the dead directly, showcasing the artifacts of the dead that, within recent years, have become a cliché of the period—allowing movements like the Order of the Good Death to flourish in the twenty-first century. Here we see a collection of both mourning fashion and jewelry that remind not only the wearer, but those that observe the wearer in public, about the dead. Each reading is taken from prominent periodicals, showing the elaborate spectacle of death that entwined itself into public display.
Yet, not every Victorian enjoyed such flagrant spectacles of grief. In this second section, we turn our attention to the popular critique of the outward mourning practices of the larger public. We begin with a contemporary overview of the mourning attire that we studied in the previous section, then move on to satirical pieces from periodicals that publically shame, or provide contextual details about the resistance to such public displays of death and mourning. Finally, we turn, yet again, to utopian fiction to see how, even in the realm of fantasy, the Victorian mindset surrounding death and grief becomes blatantly self-aware and biting.
For reading: You can either click any of the sub-sections presented on this page, or start with "Paint it Black" and follow the prescribed path to the end of this chapter.