Description

Book Synopsis

This most unusual book traces the interrelations of architecture, horticulture, literature, social history and gender.

The Victorian conservatory and the lady enclosed within it proved to be ambivalent, enigmatic and self-contradictory. What began optimistically as protection ended as imprisonment. The metaphor offers a vision of fractured femininity, juxtaposing the vegetable against the human in a dialogue of disjunction and paradox.

The work is illustrated throughout with images from garden history texts, photographs, paintings and architectural drawings. It especially examines the critical ambivalence of the conservatory space and its paradoxes.

By the middle of the Anglo-American nineteenth century, greenhouse design and gardening had developed to the point where writers and painters saw the heated glass conservatory as a space that captured symbolically the paradoxes of nurture and display thought “natural” to the Victorian lady.

 In a series of narrative encounters, some fictional, others historical, this book explores the implications of the introduction  of “Glass Consciousness” which was most famously dramatized by Joseph Paxton’s innovative Crystal Palace in 1851.

 The author examines key figures and their works. These include Paxton, whose triumphs included being the first in England to bring an Amazonian water lily into flower. Dr. Darby also closely examines Nathaniel Ward’s experiments and the work of Shirley Hibberd, John Stuart Mill and Donald Winnicott - all influential men who theorized nurture.
 

The Hothouse Flower: Nurturing Women in the

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Margaret Flanders Darby

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      View other formats and editions of The Hothouse Flower: Nurturing Women in the by Margaret Flanders Darby

      Publisher: Edward Everett Root Publishers Co. Ltd.
      Publication Date: 30/09/2020
      ISBN13: 9781913087272, 978-1913087272
      ISBN10: 1913087271

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This most unusual book traces the interrelations of architecture, horticulture, literature, social history and gender.

      The Victorian conservatory and the lady enclosed within it proved to be ambivalent, enigmatic and self-contradictory. What began optimistically as protection ended as imprisonment. The metaphor offers a vision of fractured femininity, juxtaposing the vegetable against the human in a dialogue of disjunction and paradox.

      The work is illustrated throughout with images from garden history texts, photographs, paintings and architectural drawings. It especially examines the critical ambivalence of the conservatory space and its paradoxes.

      By the middle of the Anglo-American nineteenth century, greenhouse design and gardening had developed to the point where writers and painters saw the heated glass conservatory as a space that captured symbolically the paradoxes of nurture and display thought “natural” to the Victorian lady.

       In a series of narrative encounters, some fictional, others historical, this book explores the implications of the introduction  of “Glass Consciousness” which was most famously dramatized by Joseph Paxton’s innovative Crystal Palace in 1851.

       The author examines key figures and their works. These include Paxton, whose triumphs included being the first in England to bring an Amazonian water lily into flower. Dr. Darby also closely examines Nathaniel Ward’s experiments and the work of Shirley Hibberd, John Stuart Mill and Donald Winnicott - all influential men who theorized nurture.
       

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