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The Closet The Eighteenth-Century Architecture of Intimacy

Title
The Closet [electronic resource] : The Eighteenth-Century Architecture of Intimacy / Danielle Bobker.
ISBN
0691201544
9780691201542
9780691198231
Publication
Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2020.
Manufacture
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2020.
Copyright Notice Date
©2020
Physical Description
1 online resource
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"In early modern English interior design, closets provided royalty with secluded places for reading, writing, and storing valuables, as well as for nurturing the shifting alliances on which the politics of the day depended. Admission to the closet was contingent solely on the owner's approval, and the criteria for admission were necessarily opaque. Later, in the houses of nobility and, increasingly, those of the middle class, private rooms served as prayer closets, curiosity cabinets, dressing rooms, libraries, galleries, and impromptu bedrooms. Merging with the privy and the bath, they were remade as earth closets or water closets and bathing closets. In these new iterations, closets remained important spaces where physical closeness or the exchange of knowledge, or both, could take place. The Closet proposes that the closet's material proliferation had a distinctive relationship to literature. Drawing on work by Samuel Pepys, Jonathan Swift, and Laurence Sterne, among others, the author argues that eighteenth-century writers were curious about closet relations as such-including favoritism, patronage, and voyeurism-and also turned to the closet as a figurative bond between author and audience. Dozens of texts published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were described by their writers or publishers as closets or cabinets, such as the novella "Miss C----'s Cabinet of Curiosity," containing knowledge that originated in courtly closets, prayer closets, and similar intimate spaces. The closet's longstanding associations with intimacy across social divides made it a touchstone for exploring the attachments made possible by the decline of the court, on one hand, and the proliferation of print, the first mass medium, on the other"-- Provided by publisher.
Variant and related titles
Project MUSE - 2020 Complete.
Project MUSE - 2020 Global Cultural Studies.
Other formats
Print version: Bobker, Danielle, 1969- The closet Princeton : Princeton University Press, 2020.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 08, 2020
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Rooms for improvement: The Way In
Favor: The Duchess of York's Bathing Closet
Houses of office: Lady Acheson's Privy for Two
Breaking and entering: Miss C
y's Cabinet of Curiosities
Moving closets: Parson Yorick's Vis-à-vis
Coda: Coming Out in the Twenty-First Century.
Also listed under
Project Muse.
Citation

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