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Victorian Book Reviews

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ani_cat_candy
Captain

PostPosted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 2:58 pm


Here we shall post various Victorian books and give you a rating (1-10.. Izumi will explain in a moment) and other information..

The rating is your personal rating based on enjoyment and how informative you found it to be. 10 is a "MUST BUY!" and 1 is a "Complete wast of time and money"
Please give a reason as to why you rate as such, example: "Very good pictures and artwork, but not enough information" or "not much information, but good for laughs" &c.

Please give an overview of the book and throw in some quotes from it to help others here decide if they really want to go out and buy it. (quotes are optional but Izumi does want for there to be as much information as possible without it breaking any copyright laws or whatnot)

Please post the full title of the book, the author, and the ISBN number.

if anyone would like to rate a book that has already been posted, just post the title of the book and your rating & why you give it that rating and Izumi will move it to the post with that book's review and delete the extra post to keep it nice and tidy and as un-confusing as possible.

Have fun!
PostPosted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 3:56 pm


Inside The Victorian Home: A Portrait of Domestic Life in Victorian England
by Judith Flanders
ISBN 0-393-05209-5
Rating: 10 MUST BUY! Great information, artwork, and much more! This is one of Izumi's favorite books!

Inside the cover: "Our image of how Victorians lived is based on novels and movies, mostly costume dramas of upper-class life, life of privilege, servants, leisure, country living, and money. That is fantasy. The facts are much more interesting. Most middle-class, professional Victorians lived in small houses in murky industrial cities, and the women preformed the most grueling, back-breaking tasks with little or no help. This is the subject of Judith Flanders's Inside the Victorian Home, a masterly account of how ordinary people went about their ordinary lives in 'the workshop of the world.'
Nineteenth-century Britain was the most prosperous and technologically advanced nation on earth, yet many middle-class people still carried chamber-pots* up and down stairs, buried meat in fresh earth to prevent mold from forming, wrung sheets out in boiling water with their bare hands. Such drudgery was routinely preformed by the parents and grandparents of people now living in London, but the knowledge of it has passed as if it had never been.
An average family burned a ton of coal every five weeks, and all of it had to be carried up and down the narrow stairs of the typical Victorian house, with a full coal-bucket weighing nearly thirty pounds*. Until the 1850s, prams* for babies did not exist. A mother or nursemaid taking her charge out for a 'walk' had to carry the baby - and a well-nourished eighteen-month-old in the 1880s weighed on average twenty-six pounds*. Laundry took two full days a week. The equivalent of one modern 'load' needed fifty gallons of water - all of which had to be laboriously boiled up in a specialty laundry copper* or on the kitchen stove. If the water boiled over, then the coal fire underneath flared up, spewing out steam and soot, which fell back into the clean cloths, and the whole ordeal had to begin again. The battle against dirt and dust was never-ending.
Flanders uncovers material present in familiar sources but which has been for too long been considered unimportant. Some are well known: Jane Carlyle, wife of Thomas Carlyle, cataloged her life in her renowned and witty letters; Alice James took grim satisfaction in the minutiae of her illness and impending death. Others, like the diary of the maid-of-all-work Hannah Cullwick, have only recently been accorded the importance of these middle-class documents.
The people who lived in the Victorian house inhabited a different mental world from ours. The assumptions they made about privacy, comfort, childhood, family, and gender make them seem almost impossibly remote from us. Flanders gets inside this world of middle-class Victorian social assumptions by starting at the beginning: How did these people, whose world is both so near to us and so unimaginably distant, live their daily lives? What were their expectations?
To answer these questions, Inside the Victorian Home is itself laid out like a house, following the story of daily life from room-to-room, from childbirth in the master bedroom through the scullery and kitchen - cleaning, dining, entertaining - on upwards, ending in the sickroom, and death. Using a collage of diaries, letters, advice books, magazines, and paintings, Flanders shows how social history is built up out of tiny domestic details. She also draws domestic details from the writings of the familiar personalities of the age: John Ruskin, Mrs. Beeton, Beatrix Potter, Florence Nightingale, Charles Dickens, and Charles Darwin, who, when contemplating marriage, set out the pros and cons of married and single life in facing columns. She does not neglect those on the fringes of history - E. M. Foster's aunt, forgotten women novelists, and a wide range of women who were simply going about their daily lives: the daughters of stockbrokers, schoolteachers, and doctors; the wives of journalists, academics, and illustrators.
Under Flanders's expert guidance the Victorian house opens up in front of the reader to become an exploration of Victorian life. The houses she describes are still familiar to many, but the lives are not. Inside the Victorian Home will change that."





*Chamber-pot: old-fashioned bedpans
*Thirty pounds: 13.6077711 kilograms (Izumi loves http://convertit.com )
*Prams: strollers
*Twenty-six Pounds: 11.79340162 kilograms
*Laundry Copper: a large copper basin with built-in coal stove in which one would do their laundry

ani_cat_candy
Captain

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Victorian

 
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