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BLUESTOCKING , a derisive name for a See also: literary woman
.
The See also: term originated in or about 1750, when Mrs See also: Elizabeth
See also: Montagu (q.v.) made a determined effort to introduce into society a healthier and more intellectual See also: tone, by holding assemblies at which literary conversation and discussions were to take the place of See also: cards and gossip
.
Most of those attending were conspicuous by the plainness of their dress, and a Mr Benjamin See also: Stillingfleet specially caused comment by always wearing blue or worsted stockings instead of the usual black See also: silk
.
It was in See also: special reference to him that Mrs Montagu's See also: friends were called the Bluestocking Society or See also: Club, and the See also: women frequenting her See also: house in See also: Hill Street came to be known as the " Bluestocking Ladies " or simply " bluestockings." As an alternative explanation, the origin of the name is attributed to Mrs Montagu's deliberate adoption of blue stockings (in which fashion she was followed by all her women friends) as the badge of the society she wished to
See also: form
.
She is said to have obtained the idea from See also: Paris, where in the 17th century there was a revival of a social See also: reunion in 1590 on the lines of that formed in 1400 at Venice, the ladies and men of which wore blue stockings
.
The term had been applied in See also: England as early as 1653 to the Little Parliament, in allusion to the puritanically plain and coarse dress of the members
.
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