Inventing the Victorians

Regular price €17.50
Title
A01=Matthew Sweet
Author_Matthew Sweet
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
eminent victorians
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_non-fiction
queen victoria
the victorians
the victorians a n wilson
victorian era
victorian erotica
victorians

Product details

  • ISBN 9780571206636
  • Weight: 230g
  • Dimensions: 128 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2002
  • Publisher: Faber & Faber
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Suppose that everything we think we know about 'The Victorians' is wrong? That we have persistently misrepresented the culture of the Victorian era, perhaps to make ourselves feel more satisfyingly liberal and sophisticated? What if they were much more fun than we ever suspected? Matthew Sweet's Inventing the Victorians has some revelatory - and entertaining - answers for us.

As Sweet shows us in this brilliant study, many of the concepts that strike us as terrifically new - political spin-doctoring, extravagant publicity stunts, hardcore pornography, anxieties about the impact of popular culture upon children - are Victorian inventions. Most of the pleasures that we imagine to be our own, the Victorians enjoyed first: the theme park, the shopping mall, the movies, the amusement arcade, the crime novel and the sensational newspaper report. They were engaged in a well-nigh continuous search for bigger and better thrills. If Queen Victoria wasn't amused, then she was in a very small minority . . .

Matthew Sweet's book is an attempt to re-imagine the Victorians; to suggest new ways of looking at received ideas about their culture; to distinguish myth from reality; to generate the possibility of a new relationship between the lives of nineteenth-century people and our own.

Matthew Sweet presents Night Waves and Freethinking on BBC Radio 3, and is the summer presenter of The Film Programme on Radio Four. He is the author of Inventing the Victorians and Shepperton Babylon, which he adapted as a film for BBC Four. His TV programmes include: Silent Britain; A Brief History of Fun; The Age of Excess; Truly, Madly, Cheaply and The Rules of Film Noir.