Vice and the Victorians
Autor Dr Mike Hugginsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 dec 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472530424
ISBN-10: 147253042X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 147253042X
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Draws on various sources such as newspapers, parliamentary reports, novels, sermons and paintings
Notă biografică
Mike Huggins is Emeritus Professor of Cultural History at the University of Cumbria, UK.
Cuprins
1. The Language of Vice2. The Spatial Dimension of Vice3. The Vice of Drunkenness4. Vice and Profligacy: Betting and Gaming5. Sexuality, Pornography and Prostitution6. From Vice to Virtue7. Vice and RespectabilityEpilogueSuggestions for Further Reading
Recenzii
... This is a very accessible book and one which I think should be on the reading list of everyone interested in the period ... A highly enjoyable book, warmly recommended.
".[A] good primer for student and undergraduate researchers studying Victorian culture and history. Huggins relies on primary research and his own analysis rather than only secondary sources in his well-written, well-organized book. An introductory piece on vice and the culture surrounding it leads into the many primary sources the author consults. Vice must be examined in the context of the times, and Huggins does an admirable job of painting a cultural picture. He also examines how different classes viewed vice and how each reacted to another. The book's sources are a gold mine for scholars of any tier interested in more information about Victorian-era vices."
Huggins's central contribution is bringing together a range of historiographical interpretations and sources, revealing the world of vice and virtue to be more muddled and contested than the book's intended audience might realize . Vice and the Victorians encourages a heightened attention not only to the methods and limitations of moral reform campaigns, but also to spatial components of respectability and morality.
Huggins has written a lively and well-researched study of vice during the reign of one of our noblest queens. Exploring the darkest corners of the nineteenth-century city, and taking in drunkenness, gambling, pornography and prostitution, Huggins shows that Victorian Values were not always as Margaret Thatcher imagined them to be. Although pressure against being led into temptation came from churches, charities, educators, employers, and the forces of law and order, many Victorians struggled with the devil on one shoulder and the angel on the other. Huggins tells his stories of Victorian vice with great skill.
A lively and valuable work of both colour and substance, providing a richly detailed cultural cartography of Victorian deviance and twilight pleasures. Mike Huggins' synthesis tops up and illuminates the extensive literature on vice and its challenges with impressive aplomb.
".[A] good primer for student and undergraduate researchers studying Victorian culture and history. Huggins relies on primary research and his own analysis rather than only secondary sources in his well-written, well-organized book. An introductory piece on vice and the culture surrounding it leads into the many primary sources the author consults. Vice must be examined in the context of the times, and Huggins does an admirable job of painting a cultural picture. He also examines how different classes viewed vice and how each reacted to another. The book's sources are a gold mine for scholars of any tier interested in more information about Victorian-era vices."
Huggins's central contribution is bringing together a range of historiographical interpretations and sources, revealing the world of vice and virtue to be more muddled and contested than the book's intended audience might realize . Vice and the Victorians encourages a heightened attention not only to the methods and limitations of moral reform campaigns, but also to spatial components of respectability and morality.
Huggins has written a lively and well-researched study of vice during the reign of one of our noblest queens. Exploring the darkest corners of the nineteenth-century city, and taking in drunkenness, gambling, pornography and prostitution, Huggins shows that Victorian Values were not always as Margaret Thatcher imagined them to be. Although pressure against being led into temptation came from churches, charities, educators, employers, and the forces of law and order, many Victorians struggled with the devil on one shoulder and the angel on the other. Huggins tells his stories of Victorian vice with great skill.
A lively and valuable work of both colour and substance, providing a richly detailed cultural cartography of Victorian deviance and twilight pleasures. Mike Huggins' synthesis tops up and illuminates the extensive literature on vice and its challenges with impressive aplomb.