A major work on the biopolitical shaping of femininity in the Anglophone world in the 19th Century – and indeed into the 21st Century. Elaine Stratford shows how women were conditioned to be dutiful wives and daughters whose domestic roles were to promote morality, hygiene and a healthy, disciplined population. This volume joins the scholarly pantheon, led by Dolores Hayden and Christine Boyer, who centre women's bodies in geography and planning research.— Jean Hillier, Emeritus Professor of Sustainability and Urban Planning, RMIT University
‘‘Cleanliness is next to godliness’; ‘the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world’. In nineteenth century Anglophone nations, women’s lives were understood in terms of such mantras. Their faces, fashions and domestic environments were part of their responsibility for the morality and health of their families, homes, and even the perceived decline of the population. Stratford’s lively, wide-ranging and yet penetrating analysis of nineteenth century texts shows how women’s bodies were governed in the interests of improvement.— Ruth Fincher, Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor Emeritus, School of Geography, University of Melbourne
In Home, Nature, and the Feminine Ideal Elaine Stratford presents a lucid and eloquently written account of the ways in which bodies shape, and are shaped by, geographies of the interior and empire. This powerful book beautifully illustrates the connections between feminine embodiment, home, and nature in the Anglophone world during the long nineteenth century. With compelling attention to periodical press as well as other formal and populist texts (a collaboration with the archive), Stratford charts the mechanisms of life and place. She explores national and imperial ambitions as they are entangled and folded through bodies, home, nature, communities, settlements, regions, colonies and territories. The book reveals deep insights into intricate biopolitical assemblages of gender, race, and class. Empirical gems - beauty; health; fashion; moral and social progress; scientific motherhood, domestic economy, public health and bad smells – cause the reader to pause, reflect and rethink notions of progress and reform. This stunning book will be an invaluable resource across the social sciences and humanities.
— Lynda Johnston, Professor of Geography, University of Waikato
Stratford's efforts in this book are valuable and thoughtprovoking.The strongest element of the work is the impressive depth, breadth, and mastery of the archival research Stratford has engaged in, and her ability to animate these voices from history to illuminate how the themes of home, nature, and the feminine ideal were embedded in spatial constructions.
This is a monograph worthy of consideration by scholars and graduate students in the field of historical, feminist, and critical geography, as well as for those interested in the construction of nature, environmentalism, public health, and discourses of governmentality. While it leaves some explanation to be desired at times, this book provokes deep thought and brings together a wide range of scholarship within history and geography.
— Carolyn Thompson, Southern Connecticut State University; Journal of Historical Geography
Engaging with an impressively interdisciplinary body of knowledge, Stratford seems to be as comfortable with history as she is with geography, philosophy, or literature... It takes great skill to weave together and maintain a sense of cohesion within a book that traverses more than a century of time, three far-flung countries, and the diverse themes of beauty, childhood, education, fashion, fertility, fitness, health, housing, menstruation, migration, motherhood, racism, sex, and more. Stratford displays her scholarly dexterity and sophistication in managing to create a compelling central narrative amidst this heterogeneity and complexity... Academics are often exhorted to be ‘interdisciplinary’ these days, although sometimes this term is invoked in a rather token fashion. In these pages, Stratford manages to genuinely straddle and bridge multiple disciplines. She commences her introduction with a cartographic metaphor, and indeed the ensuing pages navigate many disciplinary fields... I am confident that this book will have broad appeal to scholars and students working across these disciplines and beyond.
— Geographical Research
Stratford argues that the body is not simply a backdrop to political events and ideas; it is a crucial site where norms of culture and gender and even empire are made and remade. Home, Nature, and the Feminine Ideal is a superb book that is avowedly geographical in its Foucauldian exploration of gendered social norms and the relationship between bodies and territories.
— AAG Review of Books