Manchester Metropolitan Univ.; Jon Stobart and Kristine Dyrmann (Web)
Time: 04.06.2024
Venue: Manchester
Proposals by: 18.04.2024
Servants, both female and male, formed an integral part of country house living. They were an essential prop to leisured lifestyles, displays of status, and domestic comfort: roles that entailed them sometimes being highly visible and sometimes being hidden or effectively invisible. This workshop focuses on the ways in which servants were represented in paintings and prints, novels and poems, conduct books and servants’ guides. It will bring together researchers from a range of European countries to examine what these representations meant and the impact they had; what they can tells us about servants’ lives and how they varied over space and time. It also asks whether it is possible to glimpse servants’ representations of themselves and thus grasp something of their self-identity. Overall, the organizers seek to further our understanding of the significance of representations of servants in histories of the country house.
The organizers invite papers on any aspect of the representation of country house servants, but especially encourage contributions that focus on:
- comparative analyses that examine representations in different countries or different media
- representations of servants of different nationalities, races and colours, especially looking beyond the “fashionable” black footman/boy
- the ways in which representations are structured by the gender and rank of servants
- stereotypes and “realistic” representations
- self-representation by servants, in any media
- how representations change over time
The workshop is part of the AHRC-funded network „Hidden lives: domestic servants in the European country house, c.1700-1850“. The network brings together heritage professionals and researchers from a range of disciplines and countries to share Continue reading