Ohio State University Press
The Sanitary Arts: Aesthetic Culture and the Victorian Cleanliness Campaigns
The Sanitary Arts: Aesthetic Culture and the Victorian Cleanliness Campaigns
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The Sanitary Arts covers the mid-forties controversy over cleaning the dirt from the pictures in the National Gallery, the debate over decorative "dust traps" in the overstuffed Victorian home, and the late-century proliferation of hygienic breeding principles as a program of aesthetic perfectibility to demonstrate the unintentionally collaborative work of seemingly unrelated events and discourses. Bringing figures like Edwin Chadwick and John Ruskin into close conversation about the sanitary status of beauty in a variety of forms and environments, Cleere forcefully demonstrates that aesthetic development and scientific discovery can no longer be understood as separate or discrete forces of cultural change.
Eileen Cleere is professor of English at Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas.
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