recensione di un libro su come si vestiva Virginia Woolf e il suo gruppo, Bring No Clothes: Bloomsbury and the Philosophy of Fashion, di Charlie Porter (Particular).
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15.10.23
Bring No Clothes
When Virginia Woolf invited TS Eliot
down for a country weekend in 1920 she concluded with “Please bring no
clothes”. This was not a suggestion that “Tom” should arrive in East
Sussex naked. Such a possibility was unlikely anyway since at this point
the poet was still working as a buttoned-up clerk at Lloyds Bank. Eliot
was famously wedded to his three-piece suit to the point where, Woolf
joked, he would have worn a four-piece one if such a thing existed. What
she meant by “bring no clothes” was that at Monk’s House
they did not dress for dinner, change for church (there was no church),
or worry about getting their best clothes grubby in the garden. This
was Bloomsbury, albeit a rural version, and the clothing conventions to
which the rest of upper-middle-class society had returned after the
first world war had no place there. Kathryn Hughes, The Guardian
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