Moral Taste: Aesthetics, Subjectivity and Social Power in the Nineteenth-century Novel

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University of Toronto Press, 2007 - Literary Collections - 483 pages

One of the particular concerns of the Victorians was the notion of 'taste' and the idea that good taste in any field - clothing, décor, landscape, music, art, even food - meant good taste in all, and that tastefulness was a reliable sign of moral sensitivity, indeed of national, even racial, quality. Moral Taste is a study of the ideological work done by the equation of good taste and moral refinement in a selection of nineteenth-century writings.

Drawing on the theories of Pierre Bourdieu, Marjorie Garson discusses a number of Victorian texts that treat aesthetic refinement as an essential mark of proper middle-class subjectivity. She situates each text in its historical moment and considers it in the light of contemporary anxieties, providing insights into why certain ways of representing and endorsing tastefulness remained serviceable for many decades. In addition, this study demonstrates how the discourse of taste engenders a wider discourse about middle-class subjectivity and entitlement, national character, and racial identity in the period.

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Contents

The Discourse of Taste in Waverley
39
The Evolution of a Victorian Topos
72
Mansfield Park and Emma
114
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Marjorie Garson is a professor emerita in the Department of English at the University of Toronto.

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