A Man's Place: Masculinity and the Middle-Class Home in Victorian England

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Yale University Press, Oct 1, 2008 - Social Science - 272 pages
Domesticity is generally treated as an aspect of women’s history. In this fascinating study of the nineteenth-century middle class, John Tosh shows how profoundly men’s lives were conditioned by the Victorian ideal and how they negotiated its many contradictions.

Tosh begins by looking at the experience of boyhood, married life, sex, and fatherhood in the early decades of the nineteenth century—illustrated by case studies representing a variety of backgrounds—and then contrasts this with the lives of the late Victorian generation. He finds that the first group of men placed a new value on the home as a reaction to the disorienting experience of urbanization and as a response to the teachings of Evangelical Christianity. Domesticity still proved problematic in practice, however, because most men were likely to be absent from home for most of the day, and the role of father began to acquire its modern indeterminacy. By the 1870s, men were becoming less enchanted with the pleasures of home. Once the rights of wives were extended by law and society, marriage seemed less attractive, and the bachelor world of clubland flourished as never before.

The Victorians declared that to be fully human and fully masculine, men must be active participants in domestic life. In exposing the contradictions in this ideal, they defined the climate for gender politics in the next century.

 

Contents

List of Illustrations
ix
The MiddleClass Household II
xxv
The Ideal of Domesticity27
xli
Husband and Wife 53
lxvii
Father and Child79
xciii
Boys into Men
102
Convivial Pleasures and Public Duties I 23
123
The Decline of Deference
145
The Flight from Domesticity
170
Q 5
198
Notes2OO
229
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