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Book cover of Victorian Domesticity
Family - Assorted Topics, United States History - 19th Century - General & Miscellaneous, American & Canadian Literature, Women's Biography, Feminism, US & Canadian Literary Biography, Literary Theory, General & Miscellaneous Literary Criticism, Literary

Victorian Domesticity

by Robert Coles
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Overview

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The subject of Victorian Domesticity is family life in America. The life and works of Louisa May Alcott served as the vehicle for exploring and analyzing this subject. Although Alcott was deeply influenced by popular currents of sentimentality, her own experience exposed her to the confusions and contradictions generated when sentiment confronted the reality of life in 19th-century America.

In the first chapter Strickland outlines the ways in which sentimentality colored the perception of 19th-century Americans about such issues as courtship, marriage, the relationship between the sexes, generational relationships, and the relationship between the nuclear family and the community outside the family. Chapters two and three trace Alcott’s childhood and adolescent experiences, exploring the tensions that developed between Louisa and her father, and detailing the ways in which she carried the double burden of being both poor and female as she sought her identity as a writer.

The following six chapters treat the varieties of family life that appear in Alcott’s stories, the impact of feminism on her life, and her emphasis on the importance of child nurture. In the final two chapters the author treats the relationships that Alcott perceived between the family and the world around it and assesses the legacy of the Victorian family idea.

About the Author, Robert Coles

Charles Strickland is Associate Professor of History, Emory University.

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Editorials

Library Journal

Strickland contends that the confrontation between Alcott's own experience of ``sentimental'' family life and the ``reality of life in nineteenth century America'' generated the materials of both her domestic and melodramatic fiction, including the neglected ``adult'' novels Moods and Work. His interesting readings of Alcott's fiction would have benefitted from a recognition of the immense debt she owed to Wilkie Collins and Charlotte Yonge. The book falters on Strickland's curious identification of the term ``sentimental revolution'' with transformations in early 19th-century thought about marriage and child nurture. By trivializing as ``sentimental'' humanitarian and philosophical currents in European thought from Locke to Rousseau and beyond which recognized the rights of infants and the importance of a child's early years, Strickland makes Alcott into a far more original and yet far more parochial figure than she was. Barbara J. Dunlap, City Coll. Lib, CUNY

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1985
Publisher
University, Ala. : University of Alabama Press, c1985.
Pages
240
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780817302375

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