In 1871, George Eliot called the Victorian novel a “home epic” and identified the familial household as the primary “bourne” of nineteenth-century English narrative (Middlemarch 890). Several years later, that household is legible only by virtue of a homeless Jewish artist's appreciation, and that bourne figures as a national territory. The narrative inclusion of professional art and of international intellectualism seems to have directed literary domestic lines of development towards a collective ideal absent in the British novel since Sir Walter Scott: the national homeland.
Professional domesticity began by reconsidering a set of truisms literary critics have borrowed from social historians about nineteenth-century domesticity. It has argued that domestic tropes work to represent the home as a vocational calling and the novel form itself as a practice of ethical and social knowledge at a time when many novelists were beginning to shape their careers around an idea of intellectual property, and many feminists were using communitarian definitions of the house-hold to expand the middle-class woman's “private” sphere. By forging spaces of nonpersonal sociability and by playing peek-a-boo with received definitions of “institution,” the domestic novels under study here invite rethinking some of the binaries that have characterized the home in Anglo-American culture: leisure against work, private against public, female against male, consumption against production. Most importantly, they invite placing the idea of the home on a continuum of professionalism, which changes how we understand Victorian domestic ideology. In the course of demonstrating formal anxiety about introversion and inferiority, these novels suggest a great deal of cultural ambivalence towards nineteenth-century individualism.
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