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Victorian Servants, Class, and the Politics of Literacy

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Victorian Servants, Class, and the Politics of Literacy Synopsis

In this volume, Fernandez brings the under-examined figure of the Victorian servant out of obscurity in order to tell the story of his or her encounter with literacy, as imagined and represented in nineteenth-century fiction, autobiography, pamphlets and diaries. A vast body of writing is uncovered on the management of servant literacy in Victorian periodicals, advice manuals, cartoons, sermons, books on household management, and pornography, thereby revealing that the domestic sphere was a crucial war zone in the battle over mass literacy. By attending to how fictional and nonfictional texts of the age feature literate servant narrators, she demonstrates how the issue of servant literacy as a cultural phenomenon has profound implications for our understanding of the nexus between class, mass literacy, voice and narrative power in the nineteenth century. The study reads canonical fiction by Mary Wollstonecraft, Emily Bronte, Elizabeth Gaskell, Wilkie Collins, and R.L. Stevenson alongside popular detective fiction by Catherine Crowe, the Diaries of Hannah Cullwick, and best-selling pamphlets of the age, while introducing to Victorian scholarship hitherto little known or unknown servant autobiographies that address life history as an engagement with literacy.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780415804387
Publication date:
Author: Jean University of Maryland, Catonsville, USA Fernandez
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis Ltd
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 218 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature
Genres: Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900