By Ashli Cean Landa / Featured image by David J. Turner
When English professor Andrea Kaston Tange announced to her nineteenth-century British literature class that they would be sewing mourning dresses for two fifteen-inch dolls, she was pleased to discover that most of her students were excited by the idea.
So she was surprised by how quickly the enthusiasm faded once needles were in hand.
鈥淎fter one day of working, there was kind of a rebellion,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey were like, 鈥榯his is hard! We don鈥檛 want to do it!鈥 and I was like, 鈥榟ard is the point!鈥欌
The 鈥淟adies and Monsters鈥 class was studying Mary Barton, an 1840s novel set in the textile-industrial north of England. Tange wanted the project to help 鈥渕ake the past less of a foreign country鈥 by having students participate in common labor of the time.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e talking about a time before sewing machines, it鈥檚 almost impossible to get your head around the actual labor of living unless you try your hand at it,鈥 she says.
In the book, a character is tasked with sewing four (human-sized) mourning dresses in roughly thirty-six hours. Tange estimates that it took the class forty to fifty hours to finish the two doll-sized recreations, which included a quilted petticoat, skirt, and bodice.

鈥淲e鈥檇 be sitting in discussion talking about the book, and people kept raising their hands and [Tange] would say, 鈥楤ook question or sewing question?鈥 and they鈥檇 sheepishly say 鈥楽ewing鈥︹ and we鈥檇 all giggle because we had no idea what we were doing,鈥 Gavia Boyden 鈥26 (Seattle) says.
Tange also designed the project to encourage students鈥 engagement with the novel through a contextually comprehensive lens.
鈥淭hinking about material processes and day-today lives is crucial for understanding the conditions in which these books were written,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he conditions in which they would have been originally read鈥攚ho has the luxury of reading them and who doesn鈥檛, who鈥檚 represented and who鈥檚 not鈥攊t changes how you read.鈥
Tange鈥檚 students say the lessons were received loud and clear. Peyton Williamson 鈥27 (Austin, Texas) was 鈥渃ompletely baffled鈥 by the amount of work a character her age was expected to do.
鈥淚t really puts into perspective how much technology we have at our disposal now to do hard labor,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ewing is easier talked about than done.鈥
As difficult as learning to sew and discussing literature at the same time was, students and professor both say the final product鈥攁nd the shared experience of creating it鈥攚as well worth the effort.
鈥淲hen they suddenly had the whole doll in their hands and were able to look at the layers, the finished edges, the teeny little stitches on teeny tiny hems鈥 there was this quiet that went around the room,鈥 Tange shares. 鈥淭hey all looked a bit in awe by what they鈥檇 accomplished.鈥
鈥淢y favorite aspect was getting to know and connect with my classmates as we sat in a circle, pricked our fingers, and laughed as we struggled to thread a needle,鈥 says Boyden. 鈥淚t amazed me how possible it is to form a community over even a small labor of love.鈥