ABSTRACT

This book conceives the role of the modern town as a crucial place for material and cultural circulations of luxury. It concentrates on a critical period of historical change, the long eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, that was marked by the passage from a society of scarcity to one of expenditure and accumulation, from ranks and orders to greater social mobility, from traditional aristocratic luxury to a new bourgeois and even democratic form of luxury. This volume recognizes the notion that luxury operated as a mechanism of social separation, but also that all classes aspired to engage in consumption at some level, thus extending the idea of what constituted luxury and blurring the boundaries of class and status, often in unsettling ways. It moves beyond the moral aspects of luxury and the luxury debates to analyze how the production, distribution, purchase or display of luxury goods could participate in the creation of autonomous selves and thus challenge gender roles.

part I|78 pages

Markets and Opportunities

chapter 2|20 pages

Milliners and Marchandes de Modes

Gender, Creativity and Skill in the Workplace

chapter 3|18 pages

Gender and Luxury in Eighteenth-Century Grenoble

From Legal Exchanges to Shadow Economy 1

part III|88 pages

Class and Status