Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition
"Novelty fair examines mid-nineteenth-century people, things and places generally understood to be discrete and unrelated: urban fairs and the Great Exhibition, daguerreotypes and ballads, satirical shilling books and government-backed design reform, blackface performers and middle-class paterfamilias. A range of new and neglected sources, drawn mainly from popular culture are used to inform the discussion. The pivotal years between Chartism and the Great Exhibition emerge as far more contested than has previously been recognised and bourgeois forms and strategies are revealed as being under stress in a period that has been seen as a triumphant one for that class. Novelty fair will be of special interest to historians of Chartism, cultural historians interested in the Great Exhibition and design reform and those in the field of Victorian studies, cultural studies and visual culture more generally."
1123473718
Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition
"Novelty fair examines mid-nineteenth-century people, things and places generally understood to be discrete and unrelated: urban fairs and the Great Exhibition, daguerreotypes and ballads, satirical shilling books and government-backed design reform, blackface performers and middle-class paterfamilias. A range of new and neglected sources, drawn mainly from popular culture are used to inform the discussion. The pivotal years between Chartism and the Great Exhibition emerge as far more contested than has previously been recognised and bourgeois forms and strategies are revealed as being under stress in a period that has been seen as a triumphant one for that class. Novelty fair will be of special interest to historians of Chartism, cultural historians interested in the Great Exhibition and design reform and those in the field of Victorian studies, cultural studies and visual culture more generally."
90.49 In Stock
Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition

Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition

by Jo Briggs
Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition

Novelty fair: British visual culture between Chartism and the Great Exhibition

by Jo Briggs

eBook

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Overview

"Novelty fair examines mid-nineteenth-century people, things and places generally understood to be discrete and unrelated: urban fairs and the Great Exhibition, daguerreotypes and ballads, satirical shilling books and government-backed design reform, blackface performers and middle-class paterfamilias. A range of new and neglected sources, drawn mainly from popular culture are used to inform the discussion. The pivotal years between Chartism and the Great Exhibition emerge as far more contested than has previously been recognised and bourgeois forms and strategies are revealed as being under stress in a period that has been seen as a triumphant one for that class. Novelty fair will be of special interest to historians of Chartism, cultural historians interested in the Great Exhibition and design reform and those in the field of Victorian studies, cultural studies and visual culture more generally."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781784996413
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 03/02/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 8 MB

About the Author

Assistant Curator of 18th- and 19th-Century Art at the Walters Art Museum

Table of Contents

Introduction: time's question
1. The 'offensive body': the politics of consumption in 1848
2. 'All that is solid melts into air': representing the Chartist crowd in 1848
3. 'The gutta percha staff': between respectable and risqu satire in 1848
4. 'All that is sacred is profaned': balloons, fairs, ballads and the Great Exhibition
5. 'The pound and the shilling': romance and the cash nexus at the Great Exhibition
6. A 'chamber of horrors': class and consumption at mid-century
Conclusion: Novelty Fair, burlesquing history
Index
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