CONSUMING ANGELS This page intentionally left blank CONSUMING ANGELS Advertising and Victorian Women Lori Anne Loeb New York Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 1994 Oxford University Press Oxford New York Toronto Delhi Bombay Calcutta Madras Karachi Kuala Lumpur Singapore Hong Kong Tokyo Nairobi Dar es Salaam Cape Town Melbourne Auckland. Madrid and associated companies in Berlin Ibadan Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc. Published by Oxford University Press, Inc. 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Locb, Lori Anne. Consuming angels : advertising and Victorian women / Lori Anne Locb. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-19-508596-5 I . Advertising—Social aspects—Great Britain—History— 19th century. 2. Social values—Great Britain—History—19th century. 3. Great Britain Social conditions-—19th century, 4. Women consumers-—Great Britain--History—19th century. I. Title. HF5813.G7L63 1994 659.i'042'094109034—dC2O 93-46094 1 3 5 7 9 8 6 4- 2 Printed in the United States of America on acid free paper In memory of my grandmother Vera E. Sparfel (1898-1985) who taught me by her love and by her example This page intentionally left blank Preface The Victorian advertisement exposes materialistic fantasies. It tells of goods that excited the imagination and of mundane realities of everyday life. It is concerned with concrete embodiments of existence, and also with chimerical images of prosperity and progress. It captivates, alarms, and amuses. Yet its potential as an historical document is unrealized. Within the pages of innumerable magazines, the advertisement seems hidden. A once lively and provocative instrument, it is ready to be uncovered, to reveal the rise of consumerism, the emergence of a materially defined cultural ideal and the transformation of a society. In the late nineteenth century, I will argue, many middle-class Victo- rians gradually turned away from the puritanical focus that has been so strongly identified with the Victorian period in general. They moved to- ward a new and surprisingly more hedonistic emphasis that glorified de- mocracy; the access of all not simply to political participation, but to consumer participation; the access of all to a good life, increasingly defined in material terms. The Victorian advertisement provides an iconography of this new emphasis in cultural orientation.1 The material redefinition of the late Victorian middle-class ideal is more than tangentially linked to an intriguing paradox illuminated by historians of the Victorian family. The Victorian home has been seen as a "walled garden," a refuge from sordid industry that both nurtured family virtue and prepared family members for confrontation with the outside world.2 But the maintenance of the "sanctuary," argues Patricia Branca, contrib- uted to the early demise of many a frail, unassisted "angel in the house." Moreover, even when well equipped with a retinue of experienced ser- vants, the angel became a shrewd chancellor of the exchequer of the family purse.3 Domestic economy literature analyzed by J. A. Banks in Prosperity and Parenthood suggests that middle-class angels were voracious consum- viii Preface ers, who sustained a keen interest in household management.4 These two views of the Victorian home, as temple of virtue and center of consump- tion, seem irreconcilable, and yet they underpin most interpretations of Victorian culture. Curiously, the simple material abundance of the Victorian middle-class world has received little historical attention. Material culture studies have focused on the realities of everyday life of the working class.5 Studies of objects owned by the prosperous have been preoccupied with aesthetics and style rather than the object as embodiment of culture. Studies of Victorian interiors have stressed opulence.6 Historians of the industrial revolution have concentrated on mass production rather than mass con- sumption.7 All the major studies of British advertising8 focus on the emer- gence of advertising as a business. None deals more than marginally with the advertisement itself as a carrier of culture. In this book I will use Victorian advertisements as historical documents in order to explore late Victorian cultural ideals. But I do not argue that the Victorian advertisement provides a simple reflection of Victorian real- ity. Recognizing that consumers often do not want to see life as it really is, advertisers depict fantasy, ideals, life as it ought to be. Advertisers, further, are driven inexorably by the desire to sell goods. Finally, the class and social characteristics of advertising agents influences their depiction of social reality. T. R. Nevett, the leading historian of the Victorian advertising agency, identifies London's early advertising agents as male black-coated workers.9 Since the late 1700S the function of the British advertising agents had been mostly administrative: they provided information about newspapers and they negotiated the price and insertion of advertisements. Only a few wrote copy. Then, during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, as lavishly illustrated advertisements became more common, advertising agencies installed art departments. The advertising agent assumed creative control. Male agents paid attention to the demonstrable characteristics of a predominantly female market, but, unconsciously or not, they inevitably incorporated their masculine biases and preconceptions into their adver- tisements. The Victorian advertisement may reflect three determining fac- tors: the consumer, the agent, and the product. But as it becomes part of a visual and verbal vocabulary, it may even indirectly and unconsciously shape as well as reflect popular perceptions.10 Each of these factors is considered in an analysis based on a qualitative and quantitative examination of over 250,000 advertisements. Many arc from the John Johnson Collection of Printed Ephemera, a collection, held at the Bodleian Library, which contains hundreds of advertisements, yet has never been explored by an historian of advertising. Other advertise- ments are drawn from a range of women's magazines, home journals, general interest magazines, sporting magazines and the religious press— Queen, The Lady., Lady's Pictorial, Home Chat, Illustrated London News, Sphere, Illustrated Sporting/ and Dramatic News, Christian Age, Family Cir- cle, Hand and Heart, I have concentrated on print advertisements that Preface ix appeared mainly between 1880—1914. Advertisements during this period were usually illustrated and relatively unencumbered by editorial conven- tions, developments that made them richer cultural artifacts than early unillustrated advertisements. Further, it may be argued that there is a cultural coherence to the period between 1880—1914, which in most schemes of periodization sets it apart from the mid-Victorian years. I refer to the period between 1880—1914 loosely as late Victorian, although clearly it encompasses the Edwardian years as well. In the absence of historical conventions for evaluating advertisements, all advertisements were subjected first to a frequency content analysis that grouped advertisements according to product type, setting, sex roles, age depiction, and marketing strategies. This preliminary quantitative survey provided a foundation for the more substantive qualitative analysis that is the focus of this book. Painterly images; pictorial conventions; artistic, literary, and religious symbolism; historical allusions; repetitive poses, dress, settings, or actions; and social themes were all considered. Analysis of these patterns was informed by an appreciation of marketing strategy, the limitations of technology, the interaction of text and illustration, cog- nitive and affective response, and the demands of commercial convention. This sort of cultural reading does not depend on a doctrinaire commitment to a particular interpretation of one or even of several advertisements. Ultimately the Victorian advertisement emerges as a graphic depiction of the deepest materialistic desires of the Victorian middle class. While it illuminates the material reality of Victorian middle-class existence, it re- veals Victorian hopes, fears, and aspirations. It helps to dictate the Victo- rian paraphernalia of gentility. In doing so, it charts the cultivation of a commercial and hedonistic definition of late Victorian middle-class ideals, an orientation relevant to our understanding of Victorian culture. I WOULD LIKE to thank Richard J. Helmstadter, who, as my supervisor at the University of Toronto, led me to study advertisements. Without his advice, discerning judgment, and support this book would not have been possible. Trevor Lloyd read critically an earlier draft. R. K. Webb has provided thoughtful commentary and encouragement; he has inspired me in ways I cannot express. I have been privileged to work with wonderful collections of Victorian periodicals at Robarts Library at the University of Toronto and at the British Library at Colindale. The staff of the John Johnson Collection at the Bodleian Library, especially its curator, Julie Anne Lambert, provided incomparable professionalism and warmth. Gor- don Phillips of the History of Advertising Trust offered invaluable assis- tance. Funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Coun- cil of Canada helped support some of the research. Nancy Lane at Oxford University Press has been a wonderful editor. Finally, I should also like to thank my parents, for their love and for their endurance. Columbia, S.C. L.A.L. December 1993
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