'Living in a "Half-Baked Pageant": The Tudorbethan Semi and Suburban Modernity in Britain, 1918-39'

Sugg Ryan, Deborah (2011) 'Living in a "Half-Baked Pageant": The Tudorbethan Semi and Suburban Modernity in Britain, 1918-39'. Home Cultures, 8 (3). pp. 217-244. ISSN 1740-6315

Abstract / Summary

This article investigates the ways in which new suburban identities were forged through the architecture, design, and decoration of the modest mock-Tudor semi-detached house in the interwar years in England. It focuses particularly on the tensions between the longings for the past and aspirations for the future displayed in the architecture and interiors of “Tudorbethan“ houses. It argues that such houses embodied a specifically suburban modernity, which looked backwards to the past whilst looking forward to the future. Although contemporary critics dismissed it as ersatz and backward-looking, the Tudorbethan semi signified a coming together of nostalgia and a particularly suburban form of modernity. Speculative builders created Tudorbethan houses with modern methods of construction that combined half-oak timbering with concrete. Furthermore, whilst some of the furniture that filled the Tudorbethan semi may have been nostalgically Jacobethan in its styling, it was modern in its purpose, with metamorphic designs that made the most of small spaces. This article challenges the dominance of Modernist aesthetics and values on writing on design, architecture, and consumption by exploring popular conceptions of the “modern“ that accommodated past and present, nostalgia and modernity.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: MOCK TUDOR; MODERNITY; SUBURBIA; TUDORESQUE
ISSN: 1740-6315
Subjects: ?? 709 ??
?? 720 ??
Courses by Department: The Fashion & Textiles Institute
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Depositing User: Deborah Sugg Ryan
Date Deposited: 14 Oct 2014 08:45
Last Modified: 08 Aug 2024 09:20
URI: https://repository.falmouth.ac.uk/id/eprint/590
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