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Lethal Vanity: The Deadly Chemistry of Aristocratic Pallor: Belladonna, Lead, and Willful Self-Destruction in Victorian High Society, 1850–1890
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Lethal Vanity: The Deadly Chemistry of Aristocratic Pallor: Belladonna, Lead, and Willful Self-Destruction in Victorian High Society, 1850–1890 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $7.99

Coles
Lethal Vanity: The Deadly Chemistry of Aristocratic Pallor: Belladonna, Lead, and Willful Self-Destruction in Victorian High Society, 1850–1890 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $7.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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To achieve the highly coveted aesthetic of fragile, translucent purity, the upper-class women of the nineteenth century willingly transformed their boudoirs into lethal chemical laboratories. The relentless pursuit of beauty required daily rituals involving heavy metal toxins, neurotoxic eye drops, and systemic biological sabotage in the name of aristocratic fashion. Beneath the velvet gowns and polished corsets lay a horrific medical reality of chronic poisoning. Victorian society celebrated the physical symptoms of lead absorption and belladonna toxicity—dilated pupils, pale skin, and frail exhaustion—as the ultimate markers of romantic delicacy, effectively encouraging a prolonged, fashionable suicide among its wealthiest citizens. This morbid historical deep-dive unearths the shocking recipes of nineteenth-century cosmetic pharmacology. It investigates the societal pressures that drove women to blind themselves for brighter eyes, chronicles the agonizing physiological degradation caused by unregulated skin whiteners, and documents the slow, reluctant emergence of consumer toxicity laws. Peer beneath the powder and rouge of the Victorian era to uncover a terrifying truth about human vanity and the lengths to which society will go to manufacture aesthetic perfection.
To achieve the highly coveted aesthetic of fragile, translucent purity, the upper-class women of the nineteenth century willingly transformed their boudoirs into lethal chemical laboratories. The relentless pursuit of beauty required daily rituals involving heavy metal toxins, neurotoxic eye drops, and systemic biological sabotage in the name of aristocratic fashion. Beneath the velvet gowns and polished corsets lay a horrific medical reality of chronic poisoning. Victorian society celebrated the physical symptoms of lead absorption and belladonna toxicity—dilated pupils, pale skin, and frail exhaustion—as the ultimate markers of romantic delicacy, effectively encouraging a prolonged, fashionable suicide among its wealthiest citizens. This morbid historical deep-dive unearths the shocking recipes of nineteenth-century cosmetic pharmacology. It investigates the societal pressures that drove women to blind themselves for brighter eyes, chronicles the agonizing physiological degradation caused by unregulated skin whiteners, and documents the slow, reluctant emergence of consumer toxicity laws. Peer beneath the powder and rouge of the Victorian era to uncover a terrifying truth about human vanity and the lengths to which society will go to manufacture aesthetic perfection.


















