Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Diary of a Nobody
- Portrayal of suburban life and values
- Marriage
- lower middle
class husband's
eager commitment
to domesticity
and marital
harmony
- tensions
in the
Pooter
marriage
- emblematic
of wider
insecurities
- matrimonial
agency
scandals
- marrying
above
themselves
- "overnight transition on
Lupin's wedding day
from raffish cad to
genteel and deferential
suburban husband"
- falling
standards
- "Is Marriage a Failure?" Debate in 1888
- domestic
issues
attracted lower
middle class
- sexual
antagonism
- Crosland
- companionate marriage
- a matter of public performance
in the ubran landscape
- located firmly in the
urban private sphere
- sharing mutual anxieties
- linked with men's weakness and self doubt
- lower-middle class
- instabilities of
lower-middle
class private life
- still awaits its gender
historians
- profiles varied dramatically
between socially
heterogenous inner regions
like Hackney and more
genteel outer suburbs
- most of
the early
work on
the lower
middle
class
focused
on the
public
world
- imitating the
upper-middle
class
- "butt of scorn and
criticism from both
the agents and
advocates of
modernity"
- cult of respectability
- snobbery,
conformity,
narrowness
- deeper national
malaise
- trying to
exclude
themselves
from
working
class
- parental dignity
- family pride
- obsession with
contamination
by the
"commonness"
of the lowest
classes
- mark of parent's flexibility if they allowed their children to associate with families of lower classes
- status conscious
- at odds with
heavy-handed satirical
images
- struggling
to attain
a
realistic
level of
decency
- "sharp analysis of social insecurity"
- Family Relations
- focus on
men's
presence in
the home
- men's close
relationship to
domesticity
- weakness
in lower
middle-class
- never criticised in
working class
- equated with effeminacy
- falling
birth
rate
- decline in
family
size in
white
collar
families
from last
quarter of
the 19th
century
- lower
middle
class
among
those
with the
lowest
family
size by
1911
- growing culture of
abstinence
- silence in
autobiographies about
this
- restricting
births in
the
interests
of family
economy
and wife's
health
- male sexual
disfunction
- turning to
birth control
or late
marriage
instead of
social
reform
- men look to
male
companionship
at work
- women
working
- domestic partnership
- didn't always
mean
domestic
harmony
- compromise
- required fraught negotiations
- desperate to
collaborate on
spacing
- rarely unmitigated
matriarchal rule
- satirical
exaggerations
- tension-ridden
togetherness
- isolating intimacy
- lifelong
sentimental
attachment
to parents
or
resentment
and rebellion
- Religion
- scrutiny of
social values
- degraded to a series
of social functions
- church characterised the
family dynamics
- attack on suburbia,
attack on lower middle
class men and women
- 1905 book The Suburbans
- attacks
suburban
clerks
- suburban
vulgarity
- decline in
English
civilization
- mediorcre
consumer
goods
- degraded architecture
- declining
artistic
culture
- falling
standards of
marriage
- blaming women
for suburban
men's weakness
- representing
suburbanism as
the root cause
of degeneration
of English
national
character and
manly citizenship
- HUmour
- mocking mixed with
sympathy
- laughing at Pooter
- desperate to be
thought of as a
"somebody"
- diary as form of satire
- satirising the Victorian "very important' diary
- satirising Victorian trends
- cycling
- sentimental image of
Victorian family
- spiritualism
- the aesthetic movement
- the class system
- "The cruel
banter hints
as the
penchant of
the middle
class for
putting
pretentious
Pooters in
their place."
- Charles Pooter
- transparent claim to genility,
independence and mastery
- struggling suburban bank clerk
- metaphor for lower-middle-class
pretension, weakness and diminished
masculinity
- false authority
- private
- "I am the
master of
this
house."
- never
challenged
- public
- Pooterism
- "the dependent
weakness and
inflated social
pretension of
white-collar
workers"
- constructed in
the workplace
- expressed at home
- 1880s
- problems
of the
railway
suburb
- rise of large
corporation
- instability of
white collar
employment
- shift to
mass retailing
- changing
leisure
environments
- evolultion of
lower-middle class
caricature
- focused on married men
- relies on their
supposed
behaviour in the
home
- staid/sexually
emasculated
- not new
- shift in satire
away from earlier
model of conugal
lower middle
class masculinity
- attempt to
mark out an
autonomous
lower
middle-class
identity
- nervous
resentment of
class mockery
- heterosexual conformity
- embodied contradictions at the
heart of private sphere's
relationship to modernity
- devoted husband
- enthusiastically
domesticated
- "enthusiastic but
bungling attempts
as Mr Fixit"
- bath and
red paint
incident
- Form
- Diary
- satire
- Barry Pain's The
Eliza Books
- Pooterlike
pomposity
and
unworldliness
- extreme caricatures of
masculine weakness
- domestic life
- men's
autobiographical
representations
- autobiography
reveals satire
as
exagerrated
or simplified
- Gender Identity
- Dina Copelman
- "brought a long
overdue gender
perspective to
lower middle
class identity,
especially that of
single women"
- Male
- domestically centered
masculine identity
- domestic sphere was constructed
as an important site of identity
formation for men
- potential conflict
- gender inversion
- figure of the feminized masculinity
- compromised masculinity
- attack on suburbia
- anxieties
about national
decline
- move away
from
imperial
masculinity
- associations of white collar
men with the enthusiasms
of imperialism
- youth
- commitment
to
domesticity
- mocked
yet
became
the more
universal
model for
20th
century
family life
- male weakness
- control of
women in
the
suburban
home
- in the workplace
- in the household
- replicated in the bedroom
- highlighted by lack of independence and authority
- "black coated"
husbands
- "bow, bow, ye lower middle-classes"
- feminization
of the male
white-collar
worker
- young bachelor clerk
- alternative male role
- flamboyant
American
businessman,
Hardfur Huttle
- socially and sexually
disruptive white collar
youth
- unmarried youth
regarded as brawling,
drunkenness, sexual
experiment and
misogyny
- Lupin
- rebellious
- shocks his
father with
disorderly
social life
- overnight transition on his wedding day
- in stark contrast with
Pooter
- dangerous
- early
Victorian
portrayal of
the married
feckless petit
bourgeois
merchant
- Douglas Jerrold's 'Mrs Caudle's Curtain Lectures'
- celebrated men's deft
resistance to their wives
nagging
- appeals to material
ostentation and domestic
duty
- in favour of a homosocial
world of drinking and masonic
companionship
- men of limited means,
limited vision, and limited
faith
- wide variety
of lower middle
class men are
not
represented in
satire
- Female
- work
- clerical work being
defined in liberating ways
for lower middle class
woman
- employed
and
educated
- blamed for suburban men's weakness
- women's pretensions enslaved their husbands
- gender revolution
- control of the
domestic
sphere
- inverting
natural gender
hierarchy
- female domestic rule
- "vices"
- uncontrollable
consumerism
- rise of the
department
store
- female activity
- urban woman's site
of pleasure
- alarming
propensity to
practice birth
control
- leaving sexually
emasculate hubsand
"out of the picture:
- Rita Felski
- "the feminization of
modernity is ... largely
synonymous with its
demonization
- "unnatural and catastrophic
inversion of gender order"