The Public Culture of the Victorian Middle Class: Ritual and Authority in the English Industrial City 18401914
By (Author) Simon Gunn
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
9th August 2007
United Kingdom
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The public culture of the Victorian middle class looks at the creation of a distinctive 'high' culture in the industrial cities of Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester in the mid-nineteenth century and its incipient decline from the 1880s. The history of urban bourgeois culture has been relatively unexplored and under-theorised compared to popular culture. This volume therefore represents a significant contribution both to the study of middle-class cultural forms and to an understanding of the relationship between culture and power. In particular, it argues for the importance of ritualised modes of social behaviour in understanding the construction of authority in the nineteenth-century city. As well as many original arguments, the book provides a clear and useful overview of the public cultures of Victorian 'respectability'. The book will be of interest to scholars and students in the areas of social history, cultural history, urban history, cultural studies, urban studies and the sociology of culture. -- .
"Beautifully written and extremely readable, the book investigates new aspects of the bourgeois world, and provides new and important interpretation of the history of the nineteenth-century middle class and the Victorian city" -- Dr John Seed, Roehampton Institute, University of Surrey
Beautifully written and extremely readable, the book investigates new aspects of the bourgeois world, and provides new and important interpretation of the history of the nineteenth-century middle class and the Victorian city -- Dr John Seed, Roehampton Institute, University of Surrey
Simon Gunn is Professor of Urban History at the University of Leicester