Spaces for Feeling

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Product details

  • ISBN 9781138828162
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Mar 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Spaces for Feeling explores how English and Scottish people experienced sociabilities and socialities from 1650 to 1850, and investigates their operation through emotional practices and particular spaces. The collection highlights the forms, practices, and memberships of these varied spaces for feeling in this two hundred year period and charts the shifting conceptualisations of emotions that underpinned them.

The authors employ historical, literary, and visual history approaches to analyse a series of literary and art works, emerging forms of print media such as pamphlet propaganda, newspapers, and periodicals, and familial and personal sources such as letters, in order to tease out how particular communities were shaped and cohered through distinct emotional practices in specific spaces of feeling. This collection studies the function of emotions in group formations in Britain during a period that has attracted widespread scholarly interest in the creation and meaning of sociabilities in particular. From clubs and societies to families and households, essays here examine how emotional practices could sustain particular associations, create new social communities and disrupt the capacity of a specific cohort to operate successfully.

This timely collection will be essential reading for students and scholars of the history of emotions.

Susan Broomhall is Winthrop Professor of Early Modern History at The University of Western Australia and a Chief Investigator in the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, 1100-1800. Her previous publications include (with David G. Barrie) Police Courts in Nineteenth-Century Scotland, 2 vols (Ashgate, 2014), and, as editor, Emotions in the Household, 1200-1900 (2007).