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Refashioning the past: technology, nostalgia, and (Neo-)Victorian knitting practices

Faculty Advisor

Date

2016

Keywords

handicraft, industrialisation, knitting, leisure, middle-class women, neo-Victorian, nostalgia, print technology

Abstract (summary)

The recent rise in the popularity of knitting may seem to simply be a nostalgic anti-technological move. Of all knitting traditions, Victorian knitting stands out as a unique case of this turn to the past, because it is a temporal rather than geographic category. However, while the current interest in Victorian knitting (and in what I will call ‘neo-Victorian knitting’) signals a desire to return to the past, its connection to technology is more complex, as both the existence of the category of Victorian knitting as well as current access to the patterns that define this category are fundamentally shaped by the technologies of the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries, respectively. In drawing connections between the emergence of the category of Victorian knitting and the contemporary interest in neo-Victorian knitting, this paper unearths how these knitting traditions are fundamentally shaped both by contemporaneous technologies as well as a nostalgic yearning for times past.

Publication Information

Berezowsky, Sherrin. “Refashioning the Past: Technology, Nostalgia, and (Neo-)Victorian Knitting Practices.” Neo-Victorian Studies, vol. 8, no. 2, 2016, pp. 1-27, www.neovictorianstudies.com. Accessed 9 May 2018.

DOI

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs (CC BY-NC-ND)