Yeah. You’d probably chuck a fainting fit just to get out of one.
Yes, but mostly they had special “maternity” corsets, which had extra panels and mostly they seemed to be for “support”.
The Costumer’s Manifesto might have some links on corset history.
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It is possible that the tight-lacers are the ones who are portrayed as fainting all the time.
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Heat plus layers of clothes plus “vapours” plus the generalized self-imposed dehydration, in order to minimize the need to eliminate, would predispose anyone to faint.
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Don’t discount the subconscious factor in fainting. In my family we “know” that sometimes when a loved one is injured or ill–near death–people will faint “out of sympathy.” I did it this summer, actually, at my great-aunt’s death bed. I was very calm and enjoying talking to her, then boom–I was out on the floor.
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If we are getting the fainting thing out of books, we should remember that they are just books. They aren’t real, but they are about fantastic, dramatic events–thus, refer back to my third point.
In “Gone With the Wind,” it’s stated that “no lady went outside when she first suspected she was pregnant.” Anything that even implied you had sex was taboo. Going to parties would have been impossible.
I have another additional factor.
Anaemia, vegetables and meat in those days were boiled to hell, so dietary iron deficiency was probably an issue. Added to which there were no effective cures for heavy menstruation, women were often pregnant very soon after giving birth and so forth. Fainting is also relatively common in early pregnancy, I would imagine even more so in someone in the early stages of pregnancy wearing a corset!
Add tight corsetry to social acceptability for fainting, anaemia, arsenic and all the other things mentioned, and you have lots and lots of reasons for fainting to be more common.
Well, when Aunt Pitty wanted a party, she told Melanie to hike her hoop skirt up higher, since she was so flat in the chest people could pretend she wasn’t “in a fix.” Maybe they made exceptions for family get-togethers.
What about theS-bend corset? Ever worn one of those? (Scroll down)
I mentioned those already.
As someone who wears a pair of bodys a fair amount, don’t CUT the laces. Loosen them slowly with the person lying down or at least sitting comfortably. If you abruptly cut the bodys, you uncompress the torso, and the blood tends to want to flow back into the torso, which can make them pass out again. As I said, get them comfortable, and loosen the laces a bit, until you can fit a finger under easily in the armscye under the arm. Give them about 5 minutes, then loosten it further until you can slide your hand in flat in the same area. After about another 5 minutes you can unlace it and remove it. Think of it as mast trousers on the torso. You woulnt just pop off mast trousers, you deflate them gradually.
I am currently asking the same question and came upon your post. Why was this? Am reading the replies now…
I think it was the zombies. And maybe corsets.
I know this is a zombie, but overcooking wouldn’t do anything to the iron content of food. A lot of nutrients are broken down by overcooking, but iron is an element, and so won’t break down at anything short of supernova temperatures. I suppose it could break down some of the vitamins that help with iron absorption, but I wouldn’t expect that to be enough to cause widespread anemia.
Might frequent pregnancy have also contributed?
Apparently untrue, cooking can denature the usable iron in meat (PDF), and iron can also leach out of vegetables during boiling (table 14). Maybe not enough to cause widespread fainting though.
Regardless though, the overcooking of food would not explain the fact that only upper class women are portrayed as constantly keeling over, while everyone else just got on with it.
Regarding the OP, fainting was also faked, just for effect. Franz Lizst is known to have swooned after having played one of his fabulous concerts, and the ladies are said to have been terribly impressed with the extent of his emotional exertion. He was known as quite the dandy, in part because of this part of his act.
Lady Macbeth faints in Macbeth, presumably to distract people from suspecting her/her husband.
I have a copy of Grimm’s Fairy Tales in which the wicked queen shows up in disguise at the seven dwarfs’ house trying to kill Snow White three times. She disguises herself as three different old ladies. First she gives Snow White a poisoned comb, but when the dwarfs return, they take it out of her hair and she wakes up. Next the queen laces Snow White’s corset up too tightly. Snow White appears to die, but regains consciousness when the dwarfs loosen it. (The apple is the last thing.)
BTW, the dwarfs repeatedly warn Snow White about not opening the door to strangers. Makes me wonder if she’s stupid or suicidal.
Hmmm. Off the top of my head, I can only think of two contemporary (19th century) accounts of people fainting, swooning or generally being so overcome by emotion that they simply had to lie down.
In both instances, it is men, not women, who swoon.
The first is Jean-Francois Champollion in 1822, after deciphering the Rosetta Stone:
The second is Georg Brandes in 1874, after hearing, for the first time, Shelley’s Ode to the West Wind read aloud:
No word on whether the gents in question were wearing corsets at the time…
Anyway, does anybody have any further old-timey accounts of 19th century fainting, outside of fiction? From letters, journals, diaries, medical literature or what have you? After all, we have yet to establish that it was really as common as all that.
You might want to check out Stendhal syndrome, or Lizstomania, conditions that were evoked, apparently, by exposure to art or artistic events, and that included fainting spells.
To remove their shoes?
I see that the “s-bend” corset has been mentioned several times. That must have been where H.L. Mencken got his description of the female form.
“They jut out beneath the neck by the bow, and beneath the waist by the stern, and look like nothing so much as a drunken dollar sign”.
The man was a genius.