Novel Craft
Victorian Domestic Handicraft and Nineteenth-Century Fiction
Talia Schaffer
Reviews and Awards
"Schaffer has revolutionized the study of Victorian aesthetics." -- Choice
"Amply rewards a close reading and will influence new interpretations of Victorian fictions for years to come." -- Dickens Quarterly
"Sequins from fish scales, brooches of human hair, papier-mâché, scrap books, hand-painted glass, embroidered cushions, wool and crewel work: For the first time this exciting book gives cultural meaning, sometimes poignant, sometimes disturbing, to these artifacts of Victorian domestic handiwork. It shows how the novel incorporates craft objects to make a profound exploration of domestic and industrial economy, home and colonial spaces, use value and exchange value. It transforms the way we see the recycled trivia of the Victorian home." - Isobel Armstrong, author of Victorian Glassworlds
"In superb close readings of Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford, Charlotte Yonge's The Daisy Chain, Charles Dickens's Our Mutual Friend and Margaret Oliphant's Phoebe Junior, Schaffer tracks the meanings, desires and anxieties invested in novels as handiwork."-Times Literary Supplement