Historic House Museums in the United States and the United Kingdom: A History

Historic House Museums in the United States and the United Kingdom: A History

by Linda Young
Historic House Museums in the United States and the United Kingdom: A History

Historic House Museums in the United States and the United Kingdom: A History

by Linda Young

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Overview

Historic House Museums in the United States and the United Kingdom: A History addresses the phenomenon of historic houses as a distinct species of museum. Everyone understands the special nature of an art museum, a national museum, or a science museum, but “house museum” nearly always requires clarification. In the United States the term is almost synonymous with historic preservation; in the United Kingdom, it is simply unfamiliar, the very idea being conflated with stately homes and the National Trust.
By analyzing the motivation of the founders, and subsequent keepers, of house museums, Linda Young identifies a typology that casts light on what house museums were intended to represent and their significance (or lack thereof) today. This book examines:

• heroes’ houses: once inhabited by great persons (e.g., Shakespeare’s birthplace, Washington’s Mount Vernon);
• artwork houses: national identity as specially visible in house design, style, and technique (e.g., Frank Lloyd Wright houses, Modernist houses);
• collectors’ houses: a microcosm of collecting in situ domesticu, subsequently presented to the nation as the exemplars of taste (e.g., Sir John Soane’s Museum, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum);
• English country houses: the palaces of the aristocracy, maintained thanks to primogeniture but threatened with redundancy and rescued as museums to be touted as the peak of English national culture; English country houses: the palaces of the aristocracy, maintained for centuries thanks to primogeniture but threatened by redundancy and strangely rescued as museums, now touted as the peak of English national culture;
• Everyman/woman’s social history houses: the modern, demotic response to elite houses, presented as social history but tinged with generic ancestor veneration (e.g., tenement house museums in Glasgow and New York).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442239777
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 12/13/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 312
File size: 18 MB
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About the Author

Linda Young is a historian by discipline and a curator by trade; she has taught aspects of heritage and museum studies for more than twenty years at the University of Canberra and Deakin University in Melbourne. Her research revolves around domestic and personal goods in the nineteenth century British world.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Acknowledgments xi

Chapter 1 Is There a Museum in the House? 1

Chapter 2 Heroes' Houses: The Home of the Nation Personified 31

Chapter 3 Heroes' Houses: Literary and Other Identities 59

Chapter 4 Artwork Houses and National Aesthetics 87

Chapter 5 Collectors' Houses: Egos and Afterlives 115

Chapter 6 Social History House Museums 145

Chapter 7 Authenticity: Material Reality, Negotiated Understanding 175

Chapter 8 The English Country House 205

Chapter 9 The Significance, Insignificance, and Future of House Museums 237

Bibliography 261

Index 287

About the Author 299

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