Available Formats
Domestic Space in Britain, 1750-1840: Materiality, Sociability and Emotion
By (Author) Dr. Freya Gowrley
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
31st October 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Architecture: residential and domestic buildings
European history
History of art
747.09410903
Paperback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
454g
Between 1750 and 1840, the home took on unprecedented social and emotional significance. Focusing on the design, decoration, and reception of a range of elite and middling class homes from this period, Domestic Space in Britain, 1750-1840 demonstrates that the material culture of domestic life was central to how this function of the home was experienced, expressed, and understood at this time. Examining craft production and collection, gift exchange and written description, inheritance and loss, it carefully unpacks the material processes that made the home a focus for contemporaries social and emotional lives. The first book on its subject, Domestic Space in Britain, 1750-1840 employs methodologies from both art history and material culture studies to examine previously unpublished interiors, spaces, texts, images, and objects. Utilising extensive archival research; visual, material, and textual analysis; and histories of emotion, sociability, and materiality, it sheds light on the decoration and reception of a broad array of domestic spaces. In so doing, it writes a new history of late 18th- and early 19th-century domestic space, establishing the materiality of the home as a crucial site for identity formation, social interaction, and emotional expression.
Gowrleys intention to view the four houses and their owners, through an historical and contextual lens, is meticulously achieved in this richly fascinating study; the multi-layered, emotional sub-texts invested in material objects are sensitively extracted and interpreted, to display meaningful domestic spaces, three of which outlived their owners. * Women's Studies Group 1558 1837 *
Freya Gowrley is Lecturer in History of Art and Liberal Arts at the University of Bristol, UK.