Cheshire, Jim
(2017)
Material culture and the ‘Backstage’: a response to Peter K. Andersson’s ‘How civilized were the Victorians?'.
Journal of Victorian Culture, 22
(1).
pp. 69-80.
ISSN 1355-5502
Full content URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2016.1261601
Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
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Abstract
As part of a roundtable response to Peter Andersson's article 'How Civilized Were the Victorians', this paper argues that material culture studies can help us to articulate new historical narratives about the Victorian period. Post-structuralism helped to privilege linguistic representation to the detriment of direct analysis of material culture while approaches aligned to archaeology and anthropology enable us to rediscover the significance of physical matter and those who shaped it. The opportunities for learning how to study material culture are limited but could be enhanced through the heritage sector. As a case study, the paper examines the first selected edition of Tennyson's verse. The covers, layout and design of the book clashed with the poet's ambition of publishing a cheap edition for the working classes. The book generated a lot of profit and the selection provides evidence of Tennyson's attempts to be populist and patriotic. The posthumous description of this book, written by the poet's son, misrepresents the book as a philanthropic gesture to poor readers while it was in fact a moderately expensive book pitched at middle class readers. This interpretation of the book is only available though study of the artifact.
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