Domestic Time in Mid-nineteenth-century British Print Culture

Domestic Time in Mid-nineteenth-century British Print Culture
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Total Pages : 448
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ISBN-10 : OCLC:865545652
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Book Synopsis Domestic Time in Mid-nineteenth-century British Print Culture by : Maria Damjkaer

Download or read book Domestic Time in Mid-nineteenth-century British Print Culture written by Maria Damjkaer and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 448 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Critical discussions of Victorian domesticity have overwhelmingly focused on the spaces of the home; the temporal politics of middle-class domesticity have been ignored. This thesis argues that the mid-nineteenth century saw a sharpened interest in representing domesticity as process, not stasis -- situated in time as well as space. I examine the representation of domestic time in British print culture with focus on the 1850s, but extending from ca. 1835 to 1870. 'Domestic time' is used in the sense of the practices which make the home temporal. Since not all domestic practices could be reduced to simple schedules, writers of both fiction and non-fiction experimented with different genres and modes of representation to describe -- and hence manage -- domestic temporality. In this endeavour, they pushed at the boundaries of realism. If domestic time could be represented, the "well-run home could be reproduced across the nation and beyond -- repeated in geographical space as well as time. The material texture of mediation -- the serials and magazines of mid-century -- tied texts to temporality. Readers saw their daily lives intersected by serials, and the serial format had deep significance for a text's representation of domestic time. On the one hand, serial divisions complicate a text's ability to produce a coherent temporal logic. On the other, serial texts could synchronise readings in multiple domestic circles. I argue that when writers and publishers manipulated the divisions of the day, they also had to manipulate the divisions of the text. The thesis examines Beeton's Book of Household Management, which in its serial edition cut off in the middle of sentences; Dickens's Bleak House and its serial paratext, constructing domestic time through text and image; magazine writers and their representations of domestic time's interruptibility; Gaskell's North and South and its serial divisions; and finally scrapbooks, which re-edited print culture.


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