This article examines female-authored cookbooks in the 1860s, focusing in particular on the little-known work of Georgiana Hill, and the famous life of Isabella Beeton and her Book of Household Management. Looking at the state of cookbook publishing in the 1860s, and considering both the tone and content of these publications, the author argues that taking Hill’s authorial voice into account can enhance our understanding of how women operated in the highly competitive cookbook market. Hill’s and Beeton’s work, alongside that of Eliza Acton and numerous lesser-known cookery writers, suggests ways in which authors were conscious of addressing multiple audiences, including mistresses and servants, and both confident and incompetent cooks. At t...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This thesis explores the work of five of Britain’s most prominent food writers - Delia Smith, Jamie ...
Until recently, critics have devalued the Victorian cookbook as an object of literary inquiry, regul...
By Rachel Rich The sober title page matches Georgiana Hill's serious approach to cookery. Credit: T...
By Rachel Rich The sober title page matches Georgiana Hill's serious approach to cookery. Credit: T...
By Rachel Rich Two rabbits sitting next to the entrance of their burrow while a couple of rabbits a...
This paper sets out to provide a comparative study of two apparently unrelated cookbooks as the Brit...
The Book of Household Management by Isabella Mayson Beeton (1836-1865) is generally considered one o...
This thesis examines receipt book manuscripts of Nottinghamshire households during the long eighteen...
In this dissertation, I investigate the ways in which cookbooks published in Britain between 1660 an...
This thesis explores how familiar objects such as the homely recipe book hold our affection and shap...
Isabella Beeton Beeton’s Book of Household Management (London. S.O. Beeton, 1861). New York Public L...
In this dissertation, I investigate the ways in which cookbooks published in Britain between 1660 an...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This thesis explores the work of five of Britain’s most prominent food writers - Delia Smith, Jamie ...
Until recently, critics have devalued the Victorian cookbook as an object of literary inquiry, regul...
By Rachel Rich The sober title page matches Georgiana Hill's serious approach to cookery. Credit: T...
By Rachel Rich The sober title page matches Georgiana Hill's serious approach to cookery. Credit: T...
By Rachel Rich Two rabbits sitting next to the entrance of their burrow while a couple of rabbits a...
This paper sets out to provide a comparative study of two apparently unrelated cookbooks as the Brit...
The Book of Household Management by Isabella Mayson Beeton (1836-1865) is generally considered one o...
This thesis examines receipt book manuscripts of Nottinghamshire households during the long eighteen...
In this dissertation, I investigate the ways in which cookbooks published in Britain between 1660 an...
This thesis explores how familiar objects such as the homely recipe book hold our affection and shap...
Isabella Beeton Beeton’s Book of Household Management (London. S.O. Beeton, 1861). New York Public L...
In this dissertation, I investigate the ways in which cookbooks published in Britain between 1660 an...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This paper considers the relationship between the domestic and professional culinary world to uncove...
This thesis explores the work of five of Britain’s most prominent food writers - Delia Smith, Jamie ...