Course Description
Summary
The Great Exhibition of 1851 was meant to showcase the greatest inventions and industries of the Victorian age. Included among the various treasures from around the world, such as machinery, paintings, and gems, were samples of crochet, an art that became increasingly popular during the Victorian age. The idea of domestic handcrafts seemed to be counter to the industrial revolution, which could turn out fabricated items through machinery and at a much quicker pace. Through reading works on art and social thought by John Ruskin and William Morris as well as studying and replicating Victorian crochet, we’ll gain an understanding of Victorian sentiments and values. We’ll read Elizabeth Gaskell’s novel The Daisy and the Chain as well as Margaret Oliphant's Phoebe Junior, in order to glimpse into the ordinary, everydayness of domesticity that was at odds with industrialism. To fully appreciate and understand the process of making rather than quick consumption, we will try our hand at replicating crochet patterns from the period. You need not know how to crochet to take this course. All levels are welcomed.