The Great Fiction Bore: Free Libraries and the Construction of a Reading Public in England, 1880-1914

Reference Type Journal Article
Year of Publication
2002
Contributors Author: Mary Hammond
Journal
Libraries & Culture
Volume
37
Issue
2
Pagination
83-108
Language
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Abstract
The Public Libraries Act (England and Wales) was passed in 1850 at a time when democracy was being hotly debated but only one person in forty was eligible to vote, and compulsory elementary education for all was still twenty years in the future. This essay explores how the public library came to act as a legitimating body for the performance of class and gender through reading practices. It argues that the social and political history surrounding the library movement in England is crucial to an understanding of how, though founded on the Arnoldian principle of culture as social panacea, it had come by the First World War to function on the principle of cultural capital as social signifier.