Available Formats
Cheap Street: LondonS Street Markets and the Cultures of Informality, C.18501939
By (Author) Victoria Kelley
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
6th August 2019
United Kingdom
Hardback
224
Width 170mm, Height 240mm
From around 1850, London's street markets grew in number and scale, giving working-class Londoners a site for shopping, entertainment and sociability. Cheap Street is the first major study of this subject, analysing the street markets as a component of London's lively informal economy, and providing new insights into urban and consumer geographies. -- .
'Throughout, Kelley evokes the vibrancy and spectacle of the street markets. The chapter on Streets is a highlight, due no doubt to her expertise in the history of design and material culture. ... These stories do not just stick in the mind. Londons irregular markets were full of delight and stimulation, but at the same time complicated categories and norms of metropolitan society. Kelley lets Londons street markets dazzle us, before making us think again.'
Charlie Taverner, Cultural and Social History
'A well-written and richly illustrated book on London street markets, Victoria Kelley challenges conventional narratives of Victorian street markets as imaginative and material relics of the past.'
Judith Walkowitz, Victorian Studies
'Kelleys hugely entertaining treatment of the market culture of the East End provides an important contribution to the literature surrounding the area and the cultures of poverty and subsistence that underpinned the informal economy of the poor ... There is a breadth of scope and an adventurousness of interpretive method here that gives Kelleys study a refreshingly different take on some traditional themes.'
Antony Taylor, Left History
Victoria Kelley is Director of Research and Professor of the History of Design and Material Culture at the University for the Creative Arts