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A dandy is a man who rejects bourgeois values, devotes particular attention to his physical appearance, refines his language, cultivates his hobbies. A dandy emulates aristocratic values, often without being an aristocrat himself, thus such a dandy is a form of snob. The practice of dandyism was a counter-cultural habit that began in the revolutionary 1790s both in London and Paris.
The word "dandy" of unknown origin was a vogue word during the Napoleonic Wars. (It did make an early appearance in a Scottish border ballad about 1780, but probably not with its usual meaning.) The very model of the dandy in British society was George Bryan "Beau" Brummell (1778-1840)]], an associate of the Prince Regent: unpowdered, unperfumed, immaculately bathed and shaved, in a plain dark blue coat, perfectly brushed, of perfect fit, showing a lot of perfectly starched linens, perfectly freshly laundered, he was an early celebrity from the mid-1790s, famous chiefly for being a laconic wit and a clothes-horse. Brummell inherited a fortune of thirty thousand pounds, which he spent mostly on costume and high living, until he suffered the typical fate of the dandy, and fled from his creditors to France, and ultimately died in a lunatic asylum.
During his heyday, though, Brummell's dicta on fashion and etiquette reigned supreme. Brummell's habits of dress and fashion were much imitated, especially in France where, in an unusual mixture, they became especially the rage in bohemian quarters. People of more notable accomplishments than Brummell adopted the pose as well; Lord Byron occasionally dressed the part of the fop, and helped reintroduce the frilly, lace-cuffed and collared "poet shirt," and had his portrait painted in Albanian costume.
A great dandy in the 1840s was Alfred Guillaume Gabriel d'Orsay, the Count d'Orsay, who had been a friend of Byron and moved in the highest London circles. The great dandy of literature is the Scarlet Pimpernel, a fiction of 1905 set during the French Revolution.
In France the practice was known by the English word, as dandyisme. The dandy was self-created. The poet Charles Baudelaire wrote that an aspiring dandy must have "no profession other than elegance. . . no other 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." Jules Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly wrote an essay on The Anatomy of Dandyism, which was devoted in large measure to examining the career of Beau Brummell. By their elaborate care as to their costume, French bohemian dandies, like their less well dressed bohemian brethren, sought to convey their contempt for and superiority to bourgeois society by their dress and way of life. It is little wonder that the French dandies acquired a reputation for decadence. Their fancy-dress bohemianism became a major influence on the Symbolist movement in French literature during the latter part of the nineteenth century.
The dandy cultivated a skeptical reserve, to such extremes that the novelist George Meredith, no dandy himself, was of the opinion that "Cynicism is intellectual dandyism."
The female equivalents of dandies must be looked for in the demi-monde. An extravagant courtesan like Algernon Swinburne and Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater, the American artist James McNeill Whistler, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Max Beerbohm, Robert de Montesquieu, the dandy who inspired Marcel Proust's Baron de Charlus. In Italy Gabriele d'Annunzio and fop
The Dandy is a British children's comic book.
Dandy describes a mood, as in "I'm feeling just dandy today!". The word "peachy" might also be used instead as well, either one is considered colloquial.