This article explores the role of textiles in the home in the later eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth centuries. The methodology adopted is a response to the difficulties of researching homes in this period when probate inventories had largely ceased to be made. Instead of using quantitative analysis, this essay focuses on three case studies of homes where detailed lists allow speculation on the uses of furnishing textiles in these homes. Three themes are identified: conspicuous consumption, domestic ideology and the possible meanings of stored textiles. These themes are explored using recent cultural theories to provide a framework for analysis. (Ingenta
Much has been written in recent years about the changing material culture of textiles in late sevent...
This volume is a unique collection of essays by experts from museums and universities which for the ...
The material culture of domestic life has habitually been gendered as feminine. The traditional narr...
THIS BOOK: Textiles form the largest group of designed objects available for study, whether as objec...
Decorative textiles were the most ubiquitous form of domestic furnishing in early modern England. Fr...
Advice books in the first half of the nineteenth century offered homemakers instructions for creatin...
This thesis employs almost five hundred household inventories relating to properties in England and ...
Most homes in the past were not elite, wealthy interiors complete with high fashion furnishings, des...
The first aim of this study is to explore the experience of non-elite domestic life in the early mod...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This chapter is concerned with the relationship between materialities and temporalities in the seven...
This conference contribution, published by the University of Nebraska, Lincoln in the Proceedings of...
This article reviews and analyses the activities and findings of an AHRC research network, Ways of S...
This article explores the physical, cultural and aesthetic conditions for perceiving textiles in ear...
Much has been written in recent years about the changing material culture of textiles in late sevent...
This volume is a unique collection of essays by experts from museums and universities which for the ...
The material culture of domestic life has habitually been gendered as feminine. The traditional narr...
THIS BOOK: Textiles form the largest group of designed objects available for study, whether as objec...
Decorative textiles were the most ubiquitous form of domestic furnishing in early modern England. Fr...
Advice books in the first half of the nineteenth century offered homemakers instructions for creatin...
This thesis employs almost five hundred household inventories relating to properties in England and ...
Most homes in the past were not elite, wealthy interiors complete with high fashion furnishings, des...
The first aim of this study is to explore the experience of non-elite domestic life in the early mod...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This chapter is concerned with the relationship between materialities and temporalities in the seven...
This conference contribution, published by the University of Nebraska, Lincoln in the Proceedings of...
This article reviews and analyses the activities and findings of an AHRC research network, Ways of S...
This article explores the physical, cultural and aesthetic conditions for perceiving textiles in ear...
Much has been written in recent years about the changing material culture of textiles in late sevent...
This volume is a unique collection of essays by experts from museums and universities which for the ...
The material culture of domestic life has habitually been gendered as feminine. The traditional narr...