Class, Culture and Suburban Anxieties in the Victorian Era

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A01=Lara Baker Whelan
agar
Author_Lara Baker Whelan
British social hierarchy
Category=DSBF
ction
Domestic Fi Ction
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eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
Fi Ve
Ghost Stories
Gothic Mode
Herne Hill
ideal
Kentish Town
Le Fanu
living
London's Urban Environment
London’s Urban Environment
Metropolitan Cattle Market
middle
middle class identity
Middle Class Suburbanites
newington
Profl Igacy
sensation
sensation fiction analysis
space
stoke
Stoke Newington
Suburban Anxieties
Suburban Architecture
Suburban Building
Suburban Gothic
Suburban Ideal
Suburban Space
suburbanization history
Terrifying Sublime
Tooting Bec
town
Uninhabited House
urban cultural anxieties
Victorian literature studies
Victorian Suburb
Victorian suburban literary genre development
Violate
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415802178
  • Weight: 385g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book demonstrates how representations of the Victorian suburb in mid- to late-nineteenth century British writing occasioned a literary sub-genre unique to this period, one that attempted to reassure readers that the suburb was a place where outsiders could be controlled and where middle-class values could be enforced. Whelan explores the dissonance created by the differences between the suburban ideal and suburban realities, recognizing the persistence of that ideal in the face of abundant evidence that it was hardly ever realized. She discusses evidence from primary and secondary sources about perceptions and realities of suburban living, showing what it meant to live in a "real" Victorian suburb. The book also demonstrates how the suburban ideal (with its elements of privacy, cleanliness, rus in urbe, and respectability), in its relation to culturally embedded ideas about the Beautiful and Picturesque, gained such a strong foothold in the Victorian middle class that contemplating its failure caused intense anxiety. Whelan goes on to trace the ways in which this anxiety is represented in literature.

Lara Baker Whelan is Department Chair of English, Rhetoric and Writing at Berry College.

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