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Consuming Traditions: Modernity, Modernism, and the Commodified Authentic [Hardback]

4.00/5 (10 ratings by Goodreads)
(Associate Professor of English, University of Richmond)
  • Format: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 160x236x31 mm, weight: 465 g, 7 halftones and 15 line illustrations
  • Series: Modernist Literature & Culture
  • Pub. Date: 04-Dec-2008
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195372697
  • ISBN-13: 9780195372694
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  • Format: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 160x236x31 mm, weight: 465 g, 7 halftones and 15 line illustrations
  • Series: Modernist Literature & Culture
  • Pub. Date: 04-Dec-2008
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0195372697
  • ISBN-13: 9780195372694
Other books in subject:
In an unprecedented phenomenon that swept across Britain at the turn of the nineteenth century, writers, advertisers, and architects began to create and sell images of an authentic cultural realm paradoxically considered outside the marketplace. Such images were located in nostalgic pictures of an idyllic, pre-industrial past, in supposedly original objects not derived from previous traditions, and in the ideal of a purified aesthetic that might be separated from the mass market. Presenting a lively, unique study of what she terms the "commodified authentic," Elizabeth Outka explores this crucial but overlooked development in the history of modernity with a piercing look at consumer culture and the marketing of authenticity in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Britain.
The book brings together a wide range of cultural sources, from the model towns of Bournville, Port Sunlight, and Letchworth; to the architecture of Edwin Lutyens and Selfridges department store; to work by authors such as Bernard Shaw, E. M. Forster, Henry James, D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce, and Virginia Woolf.

Reviews

a detailed scholarly read * Rebecca Leach, Times Higher Education *

Foreword vii
Abbreviations xvii
1. Introduction: Selling Authenticity 3
PART I COMMODIFIED NOSTALGIA AND THE COUNTRY AESTHETIC
2. The Past Is a Present Country: Model Towns and Commercial Utopias
25
3. Buying Time: E. M. Forster and the Neo-nostalgic Home
68
PART II URBAN AUTHENTICITIES
4. The Vanishing Act of Commercialism: Selfridges, Modernity, and the Purified Marketplace
99
5. "Lustrous behind Glass": Woolf, Window Shopping, and Authentic Display
128
6. Conclusion: Modernist Excursions
155
Notes 175
Selected Bibliography 199
Index 209
Elizabeth Outka is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Richmond. She has published essays on modernism and British culture in Modernism/modernity, NOVEL and other publications.