1st Edition

British Boarding Houses in Interwar Women's Literature Alternative domestic spaces

By Terri Mullholland Copyright 2017
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    Embraced for the dramatic opportunities afforded by a house full of strangers, the British boarding house emerged as a setting for novels published during the interwar period by a diverse range of women writers from Stella Gibbons to Virginia Woolf. To use the single room in the boarding house or bedsit, Terri Mullholland argues, is to foreground a particular experience. While the single room represents the freedoms of independent living available to women in the early twentieth century, it also marks the precariousness of unmarried women’s lives. By placing their characters in this transient space, women writers could explore women's changing social roles and complex experiences – amateur prostitution, lesbian relationships, extra-marital affairs, and abortion – outside traditional domestic narrative concerns. Mullholland presents new readings of works by canonical and non-canonical writers, including Stella Gibbons, Winifred Holtby, Storm Jameson, Rosamond Lehmann, Dorothy Richardson, Jean Rhys, and Virginia Woolf. A hybrid of the modernist and realist domestic fiction written and read by women, the literature of the single room merges modernism's interest in interior psychological states with the realism of precisely documented exterior spaces, offering a new mode of engagement with the two forms of interiority.

    Table of Contents 

    Introduction: Reading the Single Room in the British Boarding House

    Chapter 1 – No Place Like Home: Boarding and Lodging in Dorothy Richardson’s Pilgrimage

    Chapter 2 – ‘Less than ten shillings between her and nothing’: Social Class and the Economics of the Boarding House in Storm Jameson, Lettice Cooper, and Stella Gibbons

    Chapter 3 –‘Can we go back to your room?’ – Relationships, Sexual Encounters and Romantic Friendships in Rosamond Lehmann, Jean Rhys and Winifred Holtby

    Chapter 4 – Race and Nationality: Travelling to the British Boarding House

    Chapter 5 Conclusion – Rooms for Single Women: Virginia Woolf’s The Years

    Biography

    Terri Mullholland holds a doctorate in English from the University of Oxford. Her teaching and research interests are in early twentieth-century women’s writing and the intersections of literature and spatial theory. She has published on Jean Rhys, Dorothy Richardson, and May Sinclair, and is co-editor of Spatial Perspectives: Essays on Literature and Architecture (2015).

    "This fascinating monograph, British Boarding House in Interwar Women's Literature: Alternative Domestic Spaces, encompasses some of the most familiar names in women's writing of the interwar period." -- Bryony Randall, University of Glasgow