Stripping Down the Buttoned Up
An examination of the ‘fleeting, fine-grained intimacies’ of letters, diaries and memoirs produces a witty and scholarly account of Victorian attitudes to the body.
An examination of the ‘fleeting, fine-grained intimacies’ of letters, diaries and memoirs produces a witty and scholarly account of Victorian attitudes to the body.
Many assumptions and values separate us from the Victorians, but belief in the supernatural is not one of them, argues Simone Natale.
Roger Hudson details the rebuilding of the world’s first theme park in south London in 1853.
Carroll’s perceived paedophilia seems to have little scholarly evidence.
Although unmentioned in modern reference books and works of economic history, Thornton was one of the greatest commercial figures of the day and, writes W.G. Hoskins, when he died, left “by far the largest fortune of the century to that date.”
Robert Rhodes James profiles the man rivalled only by Gladstone as the most able politician and Parliamentarian of his time.
Robert E. Zegger describes the alarming dip in Anglo-French relations, half way through the reign of Napoleon III.
A secret ballot at general elections had been a reformers’ demand since the seventeenth century. It was achieved two hundred years later, writes Robert Woodall, after much experience of bribery.
In housing management and the preservation of the countryside, writes Alan S. Watts, Octavia Hill was a Victorian pioneer.
Eynon Smart describes how, during the second half of the nineteenth century, few politicians had a wider range of personal accomplishments than John Lubbock, the author of the Bank Holidays Bill.