Fr. 86.00

Making Social Knowledge in the Victorian City - The Visiting Mode in Manchester, 1832-1914

English · Hardback

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This study explores the 'ecology of knowledge' of urban Britain in the Victorian period and seeks to examine the way in which Victorians comprehended the nature of their urban society, through an exploration of the history of Victorian Manchester, and two specific case studies on the fiction of Elizabeth Gaskell and the campaigns for educational extension which emerged out of the city. It argues that crucial to the Victorians' approaches was the 'visiting mode' as a particular discursive formation, including its institutional foundations, its characteristic modes and assumptions, and the texts which exemplify it. Recognition of the importance of the visiting mode, it is argued, offers a fundamental challenge to established Foucauldian interpretations of nineteenthcentury society and culture and provides an important corrective to recent scholarship of nineteenth-century technologies of knowing.

List of contents

List of figures
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: the ‘statistical moment’ and its limits
The Visiting Mode
The Cartographic Imaginary
Gaskell’s Manchester: the Visiting Mode in Fiction
The Case of Educational Reform
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

About the author

Martin Hewitt is Professor of History at Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, UK.

Summary

This study explores the ‘ecology of knowledge’ of urban Britain in the Victorian period and seeks to examine the way in which Victorians comprehended the nature of their urban society.

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