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<h2> Chapter Seven ~~ Dress as an Expression of the Pecuniary Culture </h2>
<p>It will in place, by way of illustration, to show in some detail how the
economic principles so far set forth apply to everyday facts in some one
direction of the life process. For this purpose no line of consumption
affords a more apt illustration than expenditure on dress. It is
especially the rule of the conspicuous waste of goods that finds
expression in dress, although the other, related principles of pecuniary
repute are also exemplified in the same contrivances. Other methods of
putting one's pecuniary standing in evidence serve their end effectually,
and other methods are in vogue always and everywhere; but expenditure on
dress has this advantage over most other methods, that our apparel is
always in evidence and affords an indication of our pecuniary standing to
all observers at the first glance. It is also true that admitted
expenditure for display is more obviously present, and is, perhaps, more
universally practiced in the matter of dress than in any other line of
consumption. No one finds difficulty in assenting to the commonplace that
the greater part of the expenditure incurred by all classes for apparel is
incurred for the sake of a respectable appearance rather than for the
protection of the person. And probably at no other point is the sense of
shabbiness so keenly felt as it is if we fall short of the standard set by
social usage in this matter of dress. It is true of dress in even a higher
degree than of most other items of consumption, that people will undergo a
very considerable degree of privation in the comforts or the necessaries
of life in order to afford what is considered a decent amount of wasteful
consumption; so that it is by no means an uncommon occurrence, in an
inclement climate, for people to go ill clad in order to appear well
dressed. And the commercial value of the goods used for clotting in any
modern community is made up to a much larger extent of the
fashionableness, the reputability of the goods than of the mechanical
service which they render in clothing the person of the wearer. The need
of dress is eminently a "higher" or spiritual need.</p>
<p>This spiritual need of dress is not wholly, nor even chiefly, a naive
propensity for display of expenditure. The law of conspicuous waste guides
consumption in apparel, as in other things, chiefly at the second remove,
by shaping the canons of taste and decency. In the common run of cases the
conscious motive of the wearer or purchaser of conspicuously wasteful
apparel is the need of conforming to established usage, and of living up
to the accredited standard of taste and reputability. It is not only that
one must be guided by the code of proprieties in dress in order to avoid
the mortification that comes of unfavorable notice and comment, though
that motive in itself counts for a great deal; but besides that, the
requirement of expensiveness is so ingrained into our habits of thought in
matters of dress that any other than expensive apparel is instinctively
odious to us. Without reflection or analysis, we feel that what is
inexpensive is unworthy. "A cheap coat makes a cheap man." "Cheap and
nasty" is recognized to hold true in dress with even less mitigation than
in other lines of consumption. On the ground both of taste and of
serviceability, an inexpensive article of apparel is held to be inferior,
under the maxim "cheap and nasty." We find things beautiful, as well as
serviceable, somewhat in proportion as they are costly. With few and
inconsequential exceptions, we all find a costly hand-wrought article of
apparel much preferable, in point of beauty and of serviceability, to a
less expensive imitation of it, however cleverly the spurious article may
imitate the costly original; and what offends our sensibilities in the
spurious article is not that it falls short in form or color, or, indeed,
in visual effect in any way. The offensive object may be so close an
imitation as to defy any but the closest scrutiny; and yet so soon as the
counterfeit is detected, its aesthetic value, and its commercial value as
well, declines precipitately. Not only that, but it may be asserted with
but small risk of contradiction that the aesthetic value of a detected
counterfeit in dress declines somewhat in the same proportion as the
counterfeit is cheaper than its original. It loses caste aesthetically
because it falls to a lower pecuniary grade.</p>
<p>But the function of dress as an evidence of ability to pay does not end
with simply showing that the wearer consumes valuable goods in excess of
what is required for physical comfort. Simple conspicuous waste of goods
is effective and gratifying as far as it goes; it is good prima facie
evidence of pecuniary success, and consequently prima facie evidence of
social worth. But dress has subtler and more far-reaching possibilities
than this crude, first-hand evidence of wasteful consumption only. If, in
addition to showing that the wearer can afford to consume freely and
uneconomically, it can also be shown in the same stroke that he or she is
not under the necessity of earning a livelihood, the evidence of social
worth is enhanced in a very considerable degree. Our dress, therefore, in
order to serve its purpose effectually, should not only he expensive, but
it should also make plain to all observers that the wearer is not engaged
in any kind of productive labor. In the evolutionary process by which our
system of dress has been elaborated into its present admirably perfect
adaptation to its purpose, this subsidiary line of evidence has received
due attention. A detailed examination of what passes in popular
apprehension for elegant apparel will show that it is contrived at every
point to convey the impression that the wearer does not habitually put
forth any useful effort. It goes without saying that no apparel can be
considered elegant, or even decent, if it shows the effect of manual labor
on the part of the wearer, in the way of soil or wear. The pleasing effect
of neat and spotless garments is chiefly, if not altogether, due to their
carrying the suggestion of leisure-exemption from personal contact with
industrial processes of any kind. Much of the charm that invests the
patent-leather shoe, the stainless linen, the lustrous cylindrical hat,
and the walking-stick, which so greatly enhance the native dignity of a
gentleman, comes of their pointedly suggesting that the wearer cannot when
so attired bear a hand in any employment that is directly and immediately
of any human use. Elegant dress serves its purpose of elegance not only in
that it is expensive, but also because it is the insignia of leisure. It
not only shows that the wearer is able to consume a relatively large
value, but it argues at the same time that he consumes without producing.</p>
<p>The dress of women goes even farther than that of men in the way of
demonstrating the wearer's abstinence from productive employment. It needs
no argument to enforce the generalization that the more elegant styles of
feminine bonnets go even farther towards making work impossible than does
the man's high hat. The woman's shoe adds the so-called French heel to the
evidence of enforced leisure afforded by its polish; because this high
heel obviously makes any, even the simplest and most necessary manual work
extremely difficult. The like is true even in a higher degree of the skirt
and the rest of the drapery which characterizes woman's dress. The
substantial reason for our tenacious attachment to the skirt is just this;
it is expensive and it hampers the wearer at every turn and incapacitates
her for all useful exertion. The like is true of the feminine custom of
wearing the hair excessively long.</p>
<p>But the woman's apparel not only goes beyond that of the modern man in the
degree in which it argues exemption from labor; it also adds a peculiar
and highly characteristic feature which differs in kind from anything
habitually practiced by the men. This feature is the class of contrivances
of which the corset is the typical example. The corset is, in economic
theory, substantially a mutilation, undergone for the purpose of lowering
the subject's vitality and rendering her permanently and obviously unfit
for work. It is true, the corset impairs the personal attractions of the
wearer, but the loss suffered on that score is offset by the gain in
reputability which comes of her visibly increased expensiveness and
infirmity. It may broadly be set down that the womanliness of woman's
apparel resolves itself, in point of substantial fact, into the more
effective hindrance to useful exertion offered by the garments peculiar to
women. This difference between masculine and feminine apparel is here
simply pointed out as a characteristic feature. The ground of its
occurrence will be discussed presently.</p>
<p>So far, then, we have, as the great and dominant norm of dress, the broad
principle of conspicuous waste. Subsidiary to this principle, and as a
corollary under it, we get as a second norm the principle of conspicuous
leisure. In dress construction this norm works out in the shape of divers
contrivances going to show that the wearer does not and, as far as it may
conveniently be shown, can not engage in productive labor. Beyond these
two principles there is a third of scarcely less constraining force, which
will occur to any one who reflects at all on the subject. Dress must not
only be conspicuously expensive and inconvenient, it must at the same time
be up to date. No explanation at all satisfactory has hitherto been
offered of the phenomenon of changing fashions. The imperative requirement
of dressing in the latest accredited manner, as well as the fact that this
accredited fashion constantly changes from season to season, is
sufficiently familiar to every one, but the theory of this flux and change
has not been worked out. We may of course say, with perfect consistency
and truthfulness, that this principle of novelty is another corollary
under the law of conspicuous waste. Obviously, if each garment is
permitted to serve for but a brief term, and if none of last season's
apparel is carried over and made further use of during the present season,
the wasteful expenditure on dress is greatly increased. This is good as
far as it goes, but it is negative only. Pretty much all that this
consideration warrants us in saying is that the norm of conspicuous waste
exercises a controlling surveillance in all matters of dress, so that any
change in the fashions must conspicuous waste exercises a controlling
surveillance in all matters of dress, so that any change in the fashions
must conform to the requirement of wastefulness; it leaves unanswered the
question as to the motive for making and accepting a change in the
prevailing styles, and it also fails to explain why conformity to a given
style at a given time is so imperatively necessary as we know it to be.</p>
<p>For a creative principle, capable of serving as motive to invention and
innovation in fashions, we shall have to go back to the primitive,
non-economic motive with which apparel originated—the motive of
adornment. Without going into an extended discussion of how and why this
motive asserts itself under the guidance of the law of expensiveness, it
may be stated broadly that each successive innovation in the fashions is
an effort to reach some form of display which shall be more acceptable to
our sense of form and color or of effectiveness, than that which it
displaces. The changing styles are the expression of a restless search for
something which shall commend itself to our aesthetic sense; but as each
innovation is subject to the selective action of the norm of conspicuous
waste, the range within which innovation can take place is somewhat
restricted. The innovation must not only be more beautiful, or perhaps
oftener less offensive, than that which it displaces, but it must also
come up to the accepted standard of expensiveness.</p>
<p>It would seem at first sight that the result of such an unremitting
struggle to attain the beautiful in dress should be a gradual approach to
artistic perfection. We might naturally expect that the fashions should
show a well-marked trend in the direction of some one or more types of
apparel eminently becoming to the human form; and we might even feel that
we have substantial ground for the hope that today, after all the
ingenuity and effort which have been spent on dress these many years, the
fashions should have achieved a relative perfection and a relative
stability, closely approximating to a permanently tenable artistic ideal.
But such is not the case. It would be very hazardous indeed to assert that
the styles of today are intrinsically more becoming than those of ten
years ago, or than those of twenty, or fifty, or one hundred years ago. On
the other hand, the assertion freely goes uncontradicted that styles in
vogue two thousand years ago are more becoming than the most elaborate and
painstaking constructions of today.</p>
<p>The explanation of the fashions just offered, then, does not fully
explain, and we shall have to look farther. It is well known that certain
relatively stable styles and types of costume have been worked out in
various parts of the world; as, for instance, among the Japanese, Chinese,
and other Oriental nations; likewise among the Greeks, Romans, and other
Eastern peoples of antiquity so also, in later times, among the peasants
of nearly every country of Europe. These national or popular costumes are
in most cases adjudged by competent critics to be more becoming, more
artistic, than the fluctuating styles of modern civilized apparel. At the
same time they are also, at least usually, less obviously wasteful; that
is to say, other elements than that of a display of expense are more
readily detected in their structure.</p>
<p>These relatively stable costumes are, commonly, pretty strictly and
narrowly localized, and they vary by slight and systematic gradations from
place to place. They have in every case been worked out by peoples or
classes which are poorer than we, and especially they belong in countries
and localities and times where the population, or at least the class to
which the costume in question belongs, is relatively homogeneous, stable,
and immobile. That is to say, stable costumes which will bear the test of
time and perspective are worked out under circumstances where the norm of
conspicuous waste asserts itself less imperatively than it does in the
large modern civilized cities, whose relatively mobile wealthy population
today sets the pace in matters of fashion. The countries and classes which
have in this way worked out stable and artistic costumes have been so
placed that the pecuniary emulation among them has taken the direction of
a competition in conspicuous leisure rather than in conspicuous
consumption of goods. So that it will hold true in a general way that
fashions are least stable and least becoming in those communities where
the principle of a conspicuous waste of goods asserts itself most
imperatively, as among ourselves. All this points to an antagonism between
expensiveness and artistic apparel. In point of practical fact, the norm
of conspicuous waste is incompatible with the requirement that dress
should be beautiful or becoming. And this antagonism offers an explanation
of that restless change in fashion which neither the canon of
expensiveness nor that of beauty alone can account for.</p>
<p>The standard of reputability requires that dress should show wasteful
expenditure; but all wastefulness is offensive to native taste. The
psychological law has already been pointed out that all men—and
women perhaps even in a higher degree abhor futility, whether of effort or
of expenditure—much as Nature was once said to abhor a vacuum. But
the principle of conspicuous waste requires an obviously futile
expenditure; and the resulting conspicuous expensiveness of dress is
therefore intrinsically ugly. Hence we find that in all innovations in
dress, each added or altered detail strives to avoid condemnation by
showing some ostensible purpose, at the same time that the requirement of
conspicuous waste prevents the purposefulness of these innovations from
becoming anything more than a somewhat transparent pretense. Even in its
freest flights, fashion rarely if ever gets away from a simulation of some
ostensible use. The ostensible usefulness of the fashionable details of
dress, however, is always so transparent a make-believe, and their
substantial futility presently forces itself so baldly upon our attention
as to become unbearable, and then we take refuge in a new style. But the
new style must conform to the requirement of reputable wastefulness and
futility. Its futility presently becomes as odious as that of its
predecessor; and the only remedy which the law of waste allows us is to
seek relief in some new construction, equally futile and equally
untenable. Hence the essential ugliness and the unceasing change of
fashionable attire.</p>
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