Most critics of aestheticism focus on the Yellow Book, the
glossy Victorian journal with the shocking yellow cover that
counted among its contributors Aubrey Beardsley and Max Beerbohm.
But one of the best-known aesthetes, Oscar Wilde, launched his own
magazine, the Woman's World. The audience for Wilde's magazine
reveals another side of the aesthetic movement that has been
largely forgotten.
Every now-canonical male aesthete once competed with what Talia
Schaffer calls the female aesthetes, whose critical and popular
success made them formidable contemporaries. Not only did these
women make significant contributions to the development of feminist
ideologies; they pioneered new literary strategies that were
incorporated by their canonical successors.
Schaffer analyzes writers who have never been considered
together, including Lucas Malet (Mary Harrison), Ouida (Marie
Louise de la Ramee), Alice Meynell, Rosamund Marriott Watson, Una
Ashworth Taylor, Elizabeth Robins Pennell, Mary and Jane Findlater,
and John Oliver Hobbes (Pearl Craigie). These women used
aestheticism to forge a compromise between the two models of female
identity available to them--the New Woman and the Angel in the
House. They developed plots, ideas, and styles that would later be
adopted, parodied, or revised by canonical writers such as Oscar
Wilde, Virginia Woolf, Thomas Hardy, and Henry James. They used the
"pretty" language of aestheticism as a strategic cover behind which
they could attempt radical experiments, many of which prefigure
modernist innovations.
Recovering the lost work of the female aesthetes forces us to
reconsider the central tenets of late-Victorian literary
history.
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