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Just Dandy: Living with Heartache and Wishes

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Our sassy collection of Hotter than a Pistol greeting cards feature vintage photos with modern humor and style.

Early manifestations of dandyism were Le petit-maître (the Little Master) and the musky Muscadin ruffians of the middle-class Thermidorean reaction (1794–1795), but modern dandyism appeared in the stratified societies of Europe during the revolutionary period of the 1790s, especially in cultural centres such as London and in Paris. [4] Socially, the dandy cultivated a persona of extreme cynical reserve to the degree that the Victorian novelist George Meredith defined such posed cynicism as "intellectual dandyism"; whereas the kinder Thomas Carlyle, in the novel Sartor Resartus (1831), dismissed the dandy as just "a clothes-wearing man"; and Honoré de Balzac in La fille aux yeux d'or (1835) chronicled the idle life of Henri de Marsay, a model French dandy done in by his obsessive Romanticism in pursuit of love, which included yielding to sexual passion and murderous jealousy. Nicolay, Claire. Origins and Reception of Regency Dandyism: Brummell to Baudelaire. PhD diss., Loyola U of Chicago, 1998.

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Regarding the social function of the dandy in a stratified society, like the British writer Carlyle, in Sartor Resartus, the French poet Baudelaire said that dandies have "no profession other than elegance . . . no other [social] status, but that of cultivating the idea of beauty in their own persons. . . . The dandy must aspire to be sublime without interruption; he must live and sleep before a mirror." Likewise, French intellectuals investigated the sociology of the dandies ( flâneurs) who strolled Parisian boulevards; in the essay " On Dandyism and George Brummell" (1845) Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly analysed the personal and social career of Beau Brummell as a man-about-town who arbitrated what was fashionable and what was unfashionable in polite society. [21] Adjective To recap, The Bear—the restaurant, that is—has opened to friends and family, but not everything’s swell and dandy for our rag-tag restaurant team. — Li Goldstein, Bon Appétit, 9 Nov. 2023 On the other hand, the Mac spin runs just dandy under Ventura on my M1 MacBook Air. — Cameron Kaiser, Ars Technica, 25 Oct. 2023 And at the beginning, her relationship with Billy is so rose-colored and dandy — and then obviously that becomes more strained as the show progresses. — Beatrice Verhoeven, The Hollywood Reporter, 14 June 2023 Garmin even summarizes it in a handy dandy Training Readiness metric that looks at your sleep, sleep history, recovery time, HRV status, training load, and stress history. — Victoria Song, The Verge, 23 June 2023 Even tennis courts and the very rooftops on our homes are oftentimes reinforced or entirely composed of some quite handy dandy asphalt. — Lance Eliot, Forbes, 1 Nov. 2021 King Charles, an already dandy man, has reached his sartorial height during his coronation. — Isiah Magsino, Town & Country, 7 May 2023 Seventy years after Murnau delivered his take on Stoker’s novel, the DIY impresario and wine merchant Francis Ford Coppola released his overstuffed, yet still fascinating, version, starring Gary Oldman as a restless dandy Dracula trying his best to seduce a wide-eyed Winona Ryder. — Mike Postalakis, SPIN, 1 Mar. 2022 Highs in the lower 80s are dandy. — David Streit, Washington Post, 9 June 2022 See More

It didn't get anybody else into us. The film got press [in America], but only 30,000 people went to a theatre to see it," says Taylor. "It was a critical success, but we're only in the Portland press, like, if Bowie's in town and talks about us. The only person from Portland who's famous is Gus Van Sant." He pauses. "Oh, and the drummer from Weezer." Botz-Bornstein, Thorsten. 'Rulefollowing in Dandyism: Style as an Overcoming of Rule and Structure' in The Modern Language Review 90, April 1995, pp.285–295. In the late 18th century, British and French men abided Beau Brummell's dictates about fashion and etiquette, especially the French bohemians who closely imitated Brummell's habits of dress, manner, and style. In that time of political progress, French dandies were celebrated as social revolutionaries who were self-created men possessed of a consciously-designed personality, men whose way of being broke with inflexible tradition that limited the social progress of greater French society; thus, with their elaborate dress and decadent styles of life, the French dandies conveyed their moral superiority to and political contempt for the conformist bourgeoisie. [20] Simulacra and Simulations — XVIII: On Nihilism". Egs.edu. Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 . Retrieved 16 February 2013.

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A Dandy is a Clothes-wearing Man, a Man whose trade, office, and existence consists in the wearing of Clothes. Every faculty of his soul, spirit, purse, and person is heroically consecrated to this one object, the wearing of Clothes wisely and well: so that as others dress to live, he lives to dress. . . . a b Brooks, Ann (15 July 2014). Popular Culture: Global Intercultural Perspectives. Macmillan International Higher Education. ISBN 9781137426727. Meinhold, Roman. "The Ideal-Typical Incarnation of Fashion: The Dandy as. . . .", essay in Fashion Myths: A Cultural Critique. Bielefeld, Germany: transcript, 2014. pp. 111–125. books.google.com/books?id=1XWiBQAAQBAJ ISBN 9783839424377

Just Dandy is located in the heart of historical downtown Cheyenne, Wyoming. Established in 1973 locally owned and operated. In the late 19th century, dandified bohemianism was characteristic of the artists who were the Symbolist movement in French poetry and literature, wherein the "Truth of Art" included the artist to the work of art. [22] Dandy sociology [ edit ] The Dandy King: Joachim Murat, the French King of Naples.This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sourcesin this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. ( May 2008) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) D'Aurevilly, Barbey. "Du dandisme et de George Brummell" (1845) in Oeuvres complètes (1925) pp. 87–92. In monarchic France, dandyism was ideologically bound to the egalitarian politics of the French Revolution (1789–1799); thus the dandyism of the jeunesse dorée (the Gilded Youth) was their political statement of aristocratic style in effort to differentiate and distinguish themselves from the working-class sans-culottes, from the poor men who owned no stylish knee-breeches made of silk.

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