ISBN: HB: 9780300124903

Yale University Press

October 2008

256 pp.

22,9x15,2 cm

70 black&white illus.

HB:
£35.00
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Cosmopolitan Interior

Liberalism and the British Home, 1870-1914

Literature on domestic interior decoration first emerged as a popular genre in Britain during the 1870s and 1880s, as middle-class readers sought decorating advice from books, household manuals, women's magazines, and professional journals. This intriguing book examines that literature and shows how it was influenced by the widespread liberalism of the middle class. Judith Neiswander explains that during these years liberal values – namely, individuality, cosmopolitanism, scientific rationalism, the progressive role of the elite, and the emancipation of women – informed advice about the desirable appearance of the home. In the period preceding the First World War, these values changed dramatically: advice on decoration became more nationalistic in tone and a new goal was set for the interior: "to raise the British child by the British hearth". Neiswander traces this evolving discourse within the context of current writing on interior decoration, writing that is much more detached from social and political issues of the day.

About the author

Judith A. Neiswander is an independent art historian.

Reviews

"[A] long-awaited and extremely interesting study of the popular literature of Victorian interior decoration... as a case study of material culture tied to the big ideas of the 19th and early 20th centuries, 'The Cosmopolitan Interior' is a far more historical study than most architectural and design historians have previously dared to write" – Lynne Walker, Institute of Historical Research

"'The Cosmopolitan Interior' is an enormously valuable new reading of the domestic advice literature" – J. Hamlett, English Historical Review