‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum

In 1925, the Dickens Fellowship founded the ‘Dickens House Museum’ at Number 48 Doughty Street, London. The site held a particular significance for Fellowship members as it was the last remaining London home of the author and the location was valued for its personal association with Dickens, establi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Catherine Malcolmson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2011-09-01
Series:19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/604
id doaj-ab66b3b27d4244b29f209d8cf1ecf82d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ab66b3b27d4244b29f209d8cf1ecf82d2021-06-02T01:34:01ZengOpen Library of Humanities19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century1755-15602011-09-011410.16995/ntn.604573‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House MuseumCatherine Malcolmson0University of LeicesterIn 1925, the Dickens Fellowship founded the ‘Dickens House Museum’ at Number 48 Doughty Street, London. The site held a particular significance for Fellowship members as it was the last remaining London home of the author and the location was valued for its personal association with Dickens, establishing a sense of ‘familial intimacy’ with the author. The museum was conceived both as a place of access to Dickens and as a receptacle for the display of objects associated with him. Promotional material utilized a language of feeling, in which the museum’s founders stated their intention that the Museum would become ‘a veritable Dickens shrine, inspiring sentiment and inculcating a spirit of veneration for the great writer’. The items displayed were designed to produce an emotional response in the museum’s visitors and to serve as an act of commemoration to Dickens. This paper will explore both the extraordinary devotion which Dickens inspired and the forms by which he was memorialised and commemorated. It will evaluate the items chosen for display, from a replica of the Dingley Dell kitchen from 'The Pickwick Papers' (1836–37), to the various ‘Dickens relics’ which were collected, and the responses which they produced in early visitors. It will demonstrate that through their activities, writings, and establishment of the Dickens Museum, the Dickens Fellowship presented a particular version of Dickens’s legacy to the public: a nuanced and sentimental portrait of the author which remains in the popular imagination today.http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/604DickensFeelingSentimentMemorialisationLiterary TourismHouse Museum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Malcolmson
spellingShingle Catherine Malcolmson
‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Dickens
Feeling
Sentiment
Memorialisation
Literary Tourism
House Museum
author_facet Catherine Malcolmson
author_sort Catherine Malcolmson
title ‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
title_short ‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
title_full ‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
title_fullStr ‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
title_full_unstemmed ‘A veritable Dickens shrine’: Commemorating Charles Dickens at the Dickens House Museum
title_sort ‘a veritable dickens shrine’: commemorating charles dickens at the dickens house museum
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series 19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
issn 1755-1560
publishDate 2011-09-01
description In 1925, the Dickens Fellowship founded the ‘Dickens House Museum’ at Number 48 Doughty Street, London. The site held a particular significance for Fellowship members as it was the last remaining London home of the author and the location was valued for its personal association with Dickens, establishing a sense of ‘familial intimacy’ with the author. The museum was conceived both as a place of access to Dickens and as a receptacle for the display of objects associated with him. Promotional material utilized a language of feeling, in which the museum’s founders stated their intention that the Museum would become ‘a veritable Dickens shrine, inspiring sentiment and inculcating a spirit of veneration for the great writer’. The items displayed were designed to produce an emotional response in the museum’s visitors and to serve as an act of commemoration to Dickens. This paper will explore both the extraordinary devotion which Dickens inspired and the forms by which he was memorialised and commemorated. It will evaluate the items chosen for display, from a replica of the Dingley Dell kitchen from 'The Pickwick Papers' (1836–37), to the various ‘Dickens relics’ which were collected, and the responses which they produced in early visitors. It will demonstrate that through their activities, writings, and establishment of the Dickens Museum, the Dickens Fellowship presented a particular version of Dickens’s legacy to the public: a nuanced and sentimental portrait of the author which remains in the popular imagination today.
topic Dickens
Feeling
Sentiment
Memorialisation
Literary Tourism
House Museum
url http://www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/604
work_keys_str_mv AT catherinemalcolmson averitabledickensshrinecommemoratingcharlesdickensatthedickenshousemuseum
_version_ 1721409656073486336