Commodity Culture in Dickens's Household Words
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Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction; Advertising fictions; The genuine article, the sham and the problem of authenticity; 'The key of the street'; 'Men made by machinery'; Worldly goods; 'Trading in death'; 'Fashion in undress'; Bibliography; Index.

About the Author

Catherine Waters is a senior lecturer in English at the University of New England (New South Wales). She is the author of Dickens and the Politics of the Family (1997) and various articles on Victorian fiction and journalism.

Reviews

Winner of the Research Society for Victorian Periodicals' Robert Colby Book Prize 2008 ’... what is new and exciting here is the intensive focus on non- fictional writing in a single periodical rather than on the novel, as well as the important related claim that although Household Words’s attitudes about and interests in commodities resonate with those of other Victorian periodicals and with Victorian culture more generally, nonetheless the distinctiveness of Household Words’s style offers new insights about these topics. ...Commodity Culture in Dickens’s Household Words nonetheless provides a fascinating look at the various ways Household Words writers imagined their own relations to different kinds of commodities, from pins and needles to the ’representation of the city as a spectacle for consumption’, while also remembering that the magazine itself was a kind of commodity ... Waters manages to gives us a deep sense of the complexity of Household Words’s multivalent engagement with ’commodity culture’.’ Review of English Studies ’This is an engaging, often thought-provoking, and highly enjoyable book that builds upon recent interest in material culture and the study of Victorian periodicals.’ Modern Language Review 'Among the many strengths of Waters's excellent book is its ability to examine Household Words without making Dickens, his fiction, or his work as editor her key to analysis. ... Providing a series of nuanced, well-detailed and theoretically grounded readings, Waters enables us to understand in a new way what seems cohesive in Household Words. ...Waters's approach to the journal and its sources of meaning illuminates its cultural significance while also foregrounding the work of its lesser-known contributors.' Dickens Quarterly

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