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Introduction

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

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’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’s lives.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationA Cultural History of Beauty
Subtitle of host publicationA Cultural History of Beauty in the Age of Enlightenment
EditorsKaren Harvey
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherBloomsbury
Number of pages36
Volume4
Edition1
ISBN (Print)9781350071711
Publication statusPublished - 19 Feb 2026

Publication series

NameThe Cultural History Series
PublisherBloomsbury Publishing

Bibliographical 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.

Keywords

  • Beauty
  • gender,
  • race
  • the body
  • Enlightenment

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