@inbook{33daec59a11c4fb3be67d23a8cd4092b,
title = "Introduction",
abstract = "This chapter discusses six main transformations in the Enlightenment culture of beauty: a growing critical engagement with the relationship between physical beauty and inner virtue; increasing emphasis on the viewer{\textquoteright}s response to beauty rather than the objective features of physical beauty; a diversification of the dominant ideals of beauty; the growing visibility amongst a widening group of people of a critical engagement with the significance of beauty, especially its relationship to sexual desire; the integration of beauty into new ideas of essentialized and embodied categories of people; and a democratization of the culture of beauty, facilitated in large part by its commercialization. Beauty culture became more accessible to a greater range of people, while longstanding and evaluative understandings of difference – notably of gender, age and race – were woven tightly into the virtues supposedly embodied in beauty in ways that made a palpable difference to people{\textquoteright}s lives.",
keywords = "Beauty, gender,, race, the body, Enlightenment",
author = "Karen Harvey",
note = "Harvey, K. (ed.) A Cultural History of Beauty in the Age of Enlightenment (1700 - 1800), vol. 4 of A Cultural History of Beauty. London: Bloomsbury. General Editor Paul Deslandes. ",
year = "2026",
month = feb,
day = "19",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781350071711",
volume = "4",
series = "The Cultural History Series",
publisher = "Bloomsbury",
editor = "Karen Harvey",
booktitle = "A Cultural History of Beauty",
edition = "1",
}