From whitened doorsteps to polished boots, starched pinafores to
scrubbed floors, this is the compelling story of how Victorians and
Edwardians engaged in the pursuit of cleanliness and the battle
against grime in domestic life. It is the first book to uncover how
cleanliness and dirt were perceived and understood at a period of
history when they were an overwhelming preoccupation.
Victoria Kelley explores this period of important change,
particularly for the working classes when, as Jose Harris comments,
"whole worlds of meaning were conveyed by microscopic household
practices, such as whether one washed ... in the bathroom or the
bedroom, or at the kitchen sink." Kelley quotes social surveys,
advice literature, autobiographies and soap advertisements, to
examine how the extreme poverty of many was being interrogated by
the official agencies seeking the means to alleviate it.
Cleanliness and dirt became part of both a material and a moral
landscape, with working-class women and their domestic work
scrutinized in particular. She goes further and examines the
spectacular imagery of cleanliness emerging in the soap brands and
advertisements that appeared at the heart of early commercial
culture.
"Soap and Water" is an important contribution to social and
design history, as well as to the history of material culture and
gender.
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