The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

The modern-day suburb began, and began booming, in 19th-century Britain. As suburbia spread, the New Woman arose and fin-de-siecle concerns grew, suburban men felt more besieged. Anxieties about hygiene, pollution, purity, the home, class, gender roles, patrilineal power and the state of the Empire rippled through British fiction. The new man of the house was trying, often desperately, to hold onto the old order, changing even more rapidly as the 20th century and modernist fiction arrived. This study traces suburban masculinities in popular genres--speculative fiction, comic fiction and detective fiction--and in literary works from the late-Victorian era to the start of the First World War.

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The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

The modern-day suburb began, and began booming, in 19th-century Britain. As suburbia spread, the New Woman arose and fin-de-siecle concerns grew, suburban men felt more besieged. Anxieties about hygiene, pollution, purity, the home, class, gender roles, patrilineal power and the state of the Empire rippled through British fiction. The new man of the house was trying, often desperately, to hold onto the old order, changing even more rapidly as the 20th century and modernist fiction arrived. This study traces suburban masculinities in popular genres--speculative fiction, comic fiction and detective fiction--and in literary works from the late-Victorian era to the start of the First World War.

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The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

by Brian Gibson
The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

The New Man of the House: Suburban Masculinities in British Fiction, 1880-1914

by Brian Gibson

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Overview

The modern-day suburb began, and began booming, in 19th-century Britain. As suburbia spread, the New Woman arose and fin-de-siecle concerns grew, suburban men felt more besieged. Anxieties about hygiene, pollution, purity, the home, class, gender roles, patrilineal power and the state of the Empire rippled through British fiction. The new man of the house was trying, often desperately, to hold onto the old order, changing even more rapidly as the 20th century and modernist fiction arrived. This study traces suburban masculinities in popular genres--speculative fiction, comic fiction and detective fiction--and in literary works from the late-Victorian era to the start of the First World War.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781476686448
Publisher: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers
Publication date: 05/23/2022
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.51(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Brian Gibson is a professor of English literature and film at Université Sainte-Anne in Nova Scotia.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments viii

Preface 1

Introduction: The Victorian Suburbs' (Un)making of Masculinity 5

Chapter 1 As Pure as the Driven Fog: William Delisle Hay's The Doom of the Great City (1880) and Grant Allen's The British Barbarians (1895) 37

Chapter 2 Pootering Him Back in His Rightful Place: George and Weedon Grossmith's The Diary of a Nobody (1892) 85

Chapter 3 Unsurelocked Homes: Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Adventure of the Yellow Face" (1893) and "The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans" (1908) 125

Coda: The Remaking of Suburban Masculinities in Early Twentieth-Century British Fiction 177

List of Works 203

Locations of Works in Suburban London 205

Chapter Notes 207

Bibliography 229

Index 237

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