Consuming Passions: Leisure and Pleasure in Victorian Britain
By (Author) Judith Flanders
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPerennial
1st December 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Industrialisation and industrial history
Consumerism
Social and cultural history
History of engineering and technology
Economic history
Popular culture
Capitalism
941.081
Paperback
400
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 38mm
460g
A delightful and fascinating social history of Victorians at leisure, told through the letters, diaries, journals and novels of nineteenth-century men and women, from the author of the bestselling The Victorian House.
Imagine a world where only one in five people owns a book, where just one in ten has a knife or a fork a world where five people out of every six do not own a cup to hold a hot drink. That was what England was like in the early eighteenth century. Yet by the close of the nineteenth century, the Industrial Revolution had brought with it not just factories, railways, mines and machines but also fashion, travel, leisure and pleasure.
Leisure became an industry a cornucopia of excitement for the masses and it was spread by newspapers, advertising, promotions and publicity all of which were eighteenth-century creations. It was Josiah Wedgwood and his colleagues who invented money-back guarantees, free delivery and celebrity endorsements. New technology such as the railways brought audiences to ever-more-elaborate extravaganzas, whether it was theatrical spectaculars with breathtaking pyrotechnics and hundreds of extras hippodramas' recreating the battle of Waterloo or the Great Exhibition itself, proudly displaying 'the products of all quarters of the globe' under twenty-two acres of the sparkling 'Crystal Palace'.
In Consuming Passions, the bestselling author of The Victorian House explores this dramatic revolution in science, technology and industry and how a world of thrilling sensation, lavish spectacle and unimaginable theatricality was born.
'Flanders writes with absorbing detail and elegant analysis.' Sunday Times 'Judith Flanders's wonderfully entertaining book!a vigorously written, fact--filled cornucopia!it has nuggets of interest on every page.' Sunday Telegraph 'Flanders's book is suitably fat and fact-packed!this is a generous survey of a world that is both far stranger and far more familiar than the one we think we know.' Daily Telegraph '"Consuming Passions" tells the story of Victorian leisure and pleasure as an interrelated and intricate set of transformations!a fascinating, bewildering, marvel-crammed quest.' Guardian 'It is a world explored with much wit and insight!Flanders is excellent!It's a rich mix [and]!fluently written!It has every chance of becoming a bestseller.' Sunday Telegraph '!her book, which is about the ways our forebears enjoyed themselves, is itself pure pleasure from beginning to end! [Flanders] is encyclopaedic in her range!This book is packed with goodies as a rich Victorian Dundee cake. Seldom has painstaking academic research been put to better use to produce a work which is pure joy. Every page crammed with interest.' Daily Mail 'Formidable![an] excellent study!a major achievement.' Observer 'If there's a better social history this year, then I will eat my crinoline.'Sue Baker, Publishing News 'Bulging bran-tub of a book, wonderfully rich and hugely enjoyable!There is something dizzily acrobatic about the mountains of evidence she constructs, and she produces her punch lines with a conjuror's panache.' The Sunday Times 'Flanders is engagingly precise.' FT Magazine 'A fascinating, kaleidoscopic exploration of what Victorians did for fun.' thelondonpaper 'Deeply satisfying!Bursting with original research and statistics, it gives a panoramic view of Victorians at play.' Country Life 'I don't think anybody could read this book without learning something new and finding things of interest. Flanders has an eye for piquant details.' Spectator '"Consuming Passions" is an absorbing Gladstone bag of a book, from which curious items spill out in delightful profusion, some familiar, some very strange indeed.' Literary Review 'Full of fascinating nuggets, this book puts our modern obsession with buying stuff firmly into context. Reverting and revealing.' Time Out
Judith Flanders is the author of critically acclaimed 'A Circle of Sisters' (2001) -- a biography of Alice Kipling, Georgiana Burne-Jones, Agnes Poynder and Louisa Baldwin -- which was nominated for the Guardian First Book Award, and the bestselling 'The Victorian House - Domestic Life from Childbirth to Deathbed' (2003). She is a frequent contributor to the 'Daily Telegraph', the 'Guardian', the 'Evening Standard', and the 'Times Literary Supplement'. She lives in London.