ISBN-13: 9783565176137 / Angielski / Miękka / 116 str.
Angela Kelly: Fashion, Power, and the Crown is a compelling and incisive examination of influence exercised beyond titles and visibility. At the heart of the book is Angela Kelly, the woman who quietly shaped the public image of Queen Elizabeth II for decades, and through it, helped sustain the symbolic authority of the British monarchy in a rapidly changing world.Moving from Kelly's working-class roots in Liverpool to her rise within the Royal Household, Charles C. Lewis explores how fashion became a form of statecraft. Clothing was never mere appearance; it was a language of continuity, diplomacy, and control. Through color, fabric, silhouette, and consistency, the Queen's image reassured a nation, communicated stability abroad, and preserved the dignity of the Crown across crises, transitions, and the final years of a historic reign.This is not a sensational memoir or celebrity exposé. Instead, the book offers a measured, deeply contextual study of invisible power-how authority can be exercised through care, discretion, and proximity rather than command. It examines the tensions that arose as media scrutiny increased, silence became contested, and loyalty was reassessed in a culture demanding transparency.Elegant, analytical, and unsentimental, Angela Kelly: Fashion, Power, and the Crown reframes fashion as a political instrument and service as a form of influence. It is essential reading for those interested in royal history, fashion as power, institutional authority, and the unseen labor that sustains enduring symbols.
Angela Kelly: Fashion, Power, and the Crown is a compelling and incisive examination of influence exercised beyond titles and visibility.