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People and Things on the Move: Domestic Material Culture, Poverty and Mobility in Victorian London
Authors
A Blunt
A Blunt
+60 more
A Kenny
A Mayne
A Mayne
A Mayne
A Mayne
A Owens
A Pred
AI Port
Alastair Owens
B Lemire
C Orser
CG Pooley
CG Pooley
CN Matthews
D Gadsby
D Hicks
DR Green
DR Green
E Ross
E Ross
F Driver
GS Stedman Jones
H Mayhew
J Leary
J Marriott
J Schneer
J Seed
J Styles
J Symonds
J Symonds
J Webster
K Hannam
L Jackson
M Allen
M Buscher
M Sheller
N Jeffries
N Jeffries
Nigel Jeffries
P Crook
P Crook
P Guillery
P Merriman
R Dennis
R Dennis
R Dennis
R Dennis
R Gilfillan
R Visram
R Yamin
R Yamin
S Strasser
SA Brighton
SM Spencer-Wood
SM Spencer-Wood
T Creswell
T Creswell
T Licence
T Murray
W Rudolph
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
© 2016, The Author(s). The development of what Mayne and Lawrence (Urban History 26: 325–48, 1999) termed “ethnographic” approaches to studying nineteenth-century households and urban communities has gathered momentum in recent years. As such research agendas have taken hold and been applied to new contexts, so critiques, methodological developments, and new intellectual and theoretical currents, have provided opportunities to enhance and develop approaches. This article contributes to this on-going process. Drawing upon household archaeological research on Limehouse, a poor neighborhood in Victorian London, and inspired by the theoretical insights provided by the “new mobilities paradigm,” it aims to place “mobility” as a central and enabling intellectual framework for understanding the relationships between people, place, and poverty. Poor communities in nineteenth-century cities were undeniably mobile and transient. Historians and archaeologists have often regarded this mobility as an obstacle to studying everyday life in such contexts. However, examining temporal routines and geographical movements across a variety of time frames and geographical scales, this article argues that mobility is actually key to understanding urban life and an important mechanism for interpreting the fragmented material and documentary traces left by poor households in the nineteenth-century metropolis.We are grateful to the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council who funded the research upon which this paper is based (Grant Reference AH/E002285/1): ‘Living in Victorian London: Towards a Material History of Everyday Domestic Life in the Nineteenth-Century Metropolis
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