ABSTRACT

Domestic advice literature is rich in information about design, ideals of domesticity, consumption and issues of identity, yet this literature remains a relatively neglected resource in comparison with magazines and film.

Design at Home brings together etiquette, homemaking and home decoration advice as sources in the first systematic demonstration of the historical value of domestic advice literature as a genre of word and image, and a discourse of dominance. This book traces a transatlantic domestic dialogue between the UK and the US as the chapters explore issues of design, domesticity, consumption, social interaction and identity markers including class, gender and age.

Areas covered include:

• the use of domestic advice by historians

• relationships between advice, housing and the middle class

• links between advice and gender

• advice and the teenage consumer

Design at Home is essential reading for students and scholars of cultural and social history, design history, and cultural studies.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Defining a genre: domestic advice literature

part |63 pages

Part I

chapter |27 pages

Real ideals

Advice and fiction

part |121 pages

Part II

chapter |40 pages

From Decline and Fall to Rise and Sprawl

Advice for the middle classes

chapter |36 pages

Easier Living? Lady Behave!

Gender and domestic advice literature

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion