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Imaginaries of Domesticity and Women’s Work in Germany around 1800
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Examines a variety of texts from late Enlightenment Germany to provide a nuanced rethinking of women's roles as wives, mothers, and housekeepers, creators of the cultural spaces of the home.Domesti...
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04 April 2023

Examines a variety of texts from late Enlightenment Germany to provide a nuanced rethinking of women's roles as wives, mothers, and housekeepers, creators of the cultural spaces of the home.
Domesticity, a set of practices, emotions, and values culminating in a nourishing emotional and physical ambience - the "feel" of being at home and belonging - connects one's subjective experience to the material environment. In late Enlightenment Germany, writers from Joachim Heinrich Campe and Theodor von Hippel to Sophie La Roche imagined the home as a space where true "humanity" would be realized. The high-stakes cultural formation of domesticity was part of a complex discourse on the pursuit of happiness as a life well lived. As domesticity became a surrogate for the lost religious certainties of the vanishing pre-modern world, an obsessive anxiety concerning its delineation in discourse suggested its importance but also its fragility and the consequences of its failure.
Karin A. Wurst examines didactic novels by female authors, autobiographical texts, popular philosophy, advice literature, periodicals, pedagogical tracts, and household manuals in pursuit of a nuanced rethinking of the relationship between women's roles as wives, mothers, and housekeepers and as creators of the cultural spaces of the home. She finds that the high-value imaginary of domesticity encouraged women's agency insofar as they were tasked with turning theoretical ideals into everyday practice. At the same time, her book shows the under-illuminated contribution of women's work to social and political change from within the patriarchal structures of eighteenth-century Germany.
Domesticity, a set of practices, emotions, and values culminating in a nourishing emotional and physical ambience - the "feel" of being at home and belonging - connects one's subjective experience to the material environment. In late Enlightenment Germany, writers from Joachim Heinrich Campe and Theodor von Hippel to Sophie La Roche imagined the home as a space where true "humanity" would be realized. The high-stakes cultural formation of domesticity was part of a complex discourse on the pursuit of happiness as a life well lived. As domesticity became a surrogate for the lost religious certainties of the vanishing pre-modern world, an obsessive anxiety concerning its delineation in discourse suggested its importance but also its fragility and the consequences of its failure.
Karin A. Wurst examines didactic novels by female authors, autobiographical texts, popular philosophy, advice literature, periodicals, pedagogical tracts, and household manuals in pursuit of a nuanced rethinking of the relationship between women's roles as wives, mothers, and housekeepers and as creators of the cultural spaces of the home. She finds that the high-value imaginary of domesticity encouraged women's agency insofar as they were tasked with turning theoretical ideals into everyday practice. At the same time, her book shows the under-illuminated contribution of women's work to social and political change from within the patriarchal structures of eighteenth-century Germany.
Price: $120.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Camden House
Series: Women and Gender in German Studies
Publication Date:
04 April 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781640141285
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / German, LITERARY CRITICISM / Women Authors, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Gender Studies, Literature: history and criticism, Gender studies: women and girls
Wurst's study is effective in challenging the reader to reconsider the concepts of agency and domesticity as they pertained to women around 1800.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Intimacies of Domestic Life: Love and Marriage
Chapter 2: Labor of Love: Mothering as a Dimension of Domesticity
Chapter 3: Feeling at Home: The Eloquence of Material Culture in the Home
Chapter 4: With Head, Heart, and Hand: Domesticity and Women's Labor
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Chapter 1: Intimacies of Domestic Life: Love and Marriage
Chapter 2: Labor of Love: Mothering as a Dimension of Domesticity
Chapter 3: Feeling at Home: The Eloquence of Material Culture in the Home
Chapter 4: With Head, Heart, and Hand: Domesticity and Women's Labor
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index