Playhouses and Privilege

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A01=Abigail A. Van Slyck
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Architecture of childhood
Author_Abigail A. Van Slyck
automatic-update
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AMX
Category=JBSP1
Category=JFSP1
Class reproduction
COP=United States
Cornelius Vanderbilt
Country houses
Cultural landscapes
Delivery_Pre-order
Domestic architecture
elite culture
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=0
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Florenz Ziegfeld
Harold Lloyd
Henry Clay Frick
Henry Ford
Isle of Wight
Language_English
Material culture
middle-class
Nurseries
Osborne
PA=Not yet available
Parenting
Payne Whitney
Playhouses
Price_€100 and above
Princess Elizabeth of York
PS=Forthcoming
Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Victoria
Shirley Temple
Social elites
softlaunch
World's Fair
Y Bwthyn Bach

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517916954
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Feb 2025
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Examining playhouses of the super-rich to understand how architecture contributed to the construction of elite identity and modern childhood

Playhouses and Privilege explores children’s playhouses built on British and American estates between the 1850s and the mid-1930s. Different from the prefabricated buildings that later populated suburban backyards, these playhouses were often fully functional cottages designed by well-known architects for British royalty, American industrialists, and Hollywood stars. As Abigail A. Van Slyck shows, these buildings were more than extravagant spaces to cultivate children’s imaginations and fantasy lives.

Reviewing a rich archive that includes extant buildings, site plans, family photographs, baby books, and intimate household correspondence, Van Slyck demonstrates that these structures were tools of social reproduction shaped by elite parents’ attitudes toward child-rearing, education, and class privilege. Recognizing playhouses as stages for the purposeful performance of upper-class identity, she illuminates their importance in influencing children to internalize gendered codes of conduct as they enacted rituals of hospitality and learned how to supervise servants.

From Queen Victoria and Prince Albert’s Swiss Cottage, built on their Osborne estate in 1853, to the children’s cottage constructed on the grounds of Cornelius Vanderbilt’s Newport mansion in 1886, and from the miniature bungalow commissioned in 1926 for the Dodge Brothers Motor Company heiress to the corporate-sponsored glass-block playhouse given to Shirley Temple in 1936, Van Slyck surveys a variety of playhouses and their milieus to trace the evolution of elite childhood and the broader social practices of wealth. Playhouses and Privilege makes clear that, far from being frivolous, playhouses were carefully planned architectural manifestations of adult concerns, integral to the reproduction of class privilege.

Abigail A. Van Slyck is the Dayton Professor Emeritus of Art History at Connecticut College and author of A Manufactured Wilderness: Summer Camps and the Shaping of American Youth, 1890–1960 (Minnesota, 2010) and Free to All: Carnegie Libraries and American Culture, 1890–1920.

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