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Chapter 10 - Reading the home: the case of The English Housewife

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

Wendy Wall
Affiliation:
Northwestern University
Helen Smith
Affiliation:
University of York
Louise Wilson
Affiliation:
University of St Andrews, Scotland
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Summary

A print manual must be pedagogically complete, or else point readers toward practical – even psychological – ways of compensating for its incompleteness.

Sandra Sherman

In 1615 soldier, writer, and horse-breeder Gervase Markham published a comprehensive estate guide that became an enduring bestseller in seventeenth-century England. First appended to a book about men’s rural sports, The English Housewife pointedly took issue with other fashionable cookery books encouraging hospitality, shopping, and leisure activities for women. With chapters detailing medical care, cooking, distilling, brewing, dairying, and textile-making, Markham instead promoted the path of home-grown practice and thrift for his national home-worker, and he did so by linking the virtues of womanhood to tasks important for the ‘generall good of this kingdome’ (Figure 10.1).

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Renaissance Paratexts , pp. 165 - 184
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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