Sunday, 16 July 2017

A History of Diary Writing



Photo Source


A diary or journal has been used for hundreds of years as a way for an individual to record the events within their daily lives, leaving a unique look at one person’s perception of the world which can be looked back upon in future years. Some diarists subsequently publish their diaries, or have them published by members of their family.

Perhaps the most famous diary in the world is that of Anne Frank, the German-born Jewish girl who hid from the Nazi’s in an attic with her family. At just fifteen when she died, her diary captured the hearts of everyone who read it for its frank and innocent view of such horrific times.

Source: Smithsonian Magazine


I myself kept a diary for a number of years during the first years of high school, recording the minutiae of daily life, as well as all my teenage crushes (there were a lot!). I recently read back over the diaries and was both embarrassed at their content and also impressed that I managed to commit to writing entries almost every day. In subsequent years, I have tried to take up journal writing again but I continually fail.

It made me think . . . was this due to a specific reason? Are our lives now too full of technology and other stimulants to make diary writing feasible? I have decided to take a look back through the centuries at when diaries became popular and how diaries were used to see if there are any reasons why they were more or less popular over different centuries. . .


The Diary’s Origin

The word ‘diary’ comes from the Latin word diarum which meant daily allowance and the earliest examples seem to come from the Middle and East Asian cultures. “The earliest surviving diary of this era which most resembles the modern day was that of Ibn Banna’ in the 11th century. His diary is the earliest known to be arranged in order of date (ta’rikh in Arabic), very much like modern diaries.” [George Makdisi, "The Diary in Islamic Historiography: Some Notes". History and Theory. 1986. pp. 173–85.]


The Rise of the Diary

Diarising was really established in England during the seventeenth century. This timing coincides with the reformation when the bible was translated into English for the first time, which meant that more men and women were learning to read and write so that they could have a more personal relationship with the bible and with God. Alongside this, with the invention of the printing press, paper became more widely produced and available for people to purchase. What with an increase in literacy and access to writing materials, diary writing began to increase in popularity.

One of the most famous diarists of the period Samuel Pepys ‘seems to have begun his diary because he was aware of the crisis affecting the nation at the start of 1660’ [source]. It seems that living within a society where there are significant political events happening is likely to encourage people to keep a journal. 

An excerpt from Pepys's diary concerning Charles II's investigations into the affairs of the Navy Office [source]


Diaries really seem to have hit the height of popularity between the 18th and 20th centuries and authors such as Jane Austen show their characters writing in their diary about their lives. This could be again due to the fact that the physical diary was more readily available in shops and were more affordable. Secondly, this is a period in history which brought great change to England. There was the industrial revolution, the building of the railways, the expansion of the British Empire, steam power and much, much more! Perhaps we can surmise that, like Samuel Pepys in the 17th century, diarists living in the later centuries were compelled to write in a way to record the changing world around them.


Men and Women, how they differ

Whilst men seem to have been keen to keep a diary in order to record major events in their lives, both personally as well as major social events, women’s diaries were much more about their personal lives and the lives of people around them. They were filled with observations about different people and so were more emotionally written, where men were more likely to record in a non-emotive, almost catalogue style.

Many historians have relied upon these diaries in order to find out more about the intimate personalities of those who have lived before us, as without those diaries, historians would have to reply upon newspaper articles and letters. Both of these can be limiting in that newspapers can be biased and articles about specific people are usually only written when something significant has happened to them such as a birth, death, marriage or scandal, and letters, due to their very nature tend not to be very confessional. It is quite rare for someone to spill their deepest secrets to a family member or friend, but they are much more willing to do so in a diary which no one may read. In this respect then, the diary is the closest historians can come to knowing a historical person without having been with them when they were alive.


So when I had looked into this and thought about it a bit more, I realised that there were several reasons why diary writing may be dying out; we are a much more conversation based society now, we know a lot more about the lives of those around us from television and mass media, and also the invention of social media allows us to record our daily lives in an almost technology based diary.

Perhaps all social media users are writing a diary, it’s just the medium that has changed. I guess we will have to wait for historians in the future to decide!






Saturday, 3 June 2017

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown - Who Was He?

Lancelot 'Capability' Brown by Nathaniel Dance, (died 1811) - National Portrait Gallery: NPG 1490
During the 18th century if you owned a country house and wanted society people to visit and admire your stately seat, then you needed to ensure that the architectural style of the house and gardens were contemporary and 'in vogue'. Throughout the period there was one single name which was on the lips of the gentry when it came to updating their estate and gardens, Lancelot 'Capability' Brown.

Brown was born in 1716 in a village in Northumbria called Kirkhale, to William (a land agent) and Ursula Brown. He was the fifth child and so whilst he was not born into poverty, he certainly was not born to privilege or into the gentry. He was educated at Cambo School until the age of 16 when he left to become a gardener's apprentice at the same estate that his father worked at. He worked there until the age of 23 where his interest and passion for gardening was fostered by the estate owner Sir William Loraine.

Following this role, Brown moved to Stowe which was his breakthrough position. As under gardener to William Kent he was privy to great opportunity as well as expertise. He arrived at Stowe in 1741 and within ten years he had moved to London with his family to set up his own landscape design company.

"Brown's career as a landscape architect spanned over 50 years and he was responsible for transforming huge expanses of the British Isles and beyond into the natural Arcadian parkland that is so synonymous with English scenery. In reality he didn't so much design a landscape as allow nature to dictate its own surroundings." (Capability Brown & Belvoir: Discovering a Lost Landscape from The Duchess of Rutland and Jane Pruden).


Whilst the gentry loved Brown and were keen to employ him on their lands, the local village people must have quaked in their books when they learned he was to be employed at their local gentry's estate as Brown was known for wiping out villages if they got in the way of his vision or were too close to the country house in question.

Audley End, Nuneham and Bowood were just a few of the villages which were demolished either as a way to increase the separation between the poor of the villages and the rich of the 'big house', or because they sat in direct view of the house and therefore spoiled the rural view he was trying to create.

Badminton House - an example of Brown's work

The idea of Brown's landscape was to give inhabitants an visitors of the house an unbroken view across a landscape of rolling hills, fields, trees and lakes. If a village or church got in the way, it ran the risk of either being totally demolished and its inhabitants forced to move elsewhere, or, it could be moved and relocated elsewhere.

Brown was also criticised for the fact that when his landscapes were introduced at a country estate, they often wiped out any formal gardens, meaning many historical garden features were lost.

Whatever side you come down upon, either a staunch anti-Brown or Brown lover, one thing can be certain - Lancelot 'Capability' Brown designed some of the most famous landscapes in the country including Chatsworth, Blenheim Palace, Althorp Hall, Longleat, Hampton Court Palace, Harewood House, Kew Gardens, Warwick Castle and Stowe Landscape Garden among hundreds more.

Sunday, 21 May 2017

New Period Dramas Coming Soon!

I am sure it will not surprise you to discover that I am a serious period drama junkie! I have enjoyed watching adaptations of novels such as Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility as well as period dramas written specifically for TV and the big screen such as Gosford Park, The Remains of the Day and of course Downton Abbey. If you read one of my previous blog posts on films that inspired my love of country houses then you may have had an inkling of this!

For as long as I can remember there have been period programmes and films released and they seem to be just as popular today as they ever were. I have just recently discovered Poldark - a lovely drama telling the stories of people who lived on the Cornish coast in the 17th century. It has sweeping views of the coast as well as love stories, jealousy, tragedy and treachery. It is a perfect Sunday afternoon watch.

I have now watched to the end of season two and whilst I anticipate season three, I thought I would look for some other period dramas which are coming to our televisions and cinemas in the next few months . . .

Poldark Season 3

Photo Source: DigitalSpy
This cornish period drama returns to BBC One on Sunday evenings in June, so we don't have that long to wait. Whilst the second season was aired in the Autumn last year, the third season has surprised fans by being brought forward to the Summer. Whilst programme creators deny this is to avoid a clash with season two of Victoria - ITV's current period offering starring Jenna Coleman, it is likely that this is a major reason for the change so that both programmes are not competing for viewers. Either way, I'm not complaining as I get to watch my favourite red-haired character sticking it to the men sooner than expected!

We don't know much about what to expect in season three, although we know there will be a new vicar, Osborne Whitworth, who will be causing havoc in the small Cornish town. I do hope the writers don't go down the usual 'witch hunting' path though! There will also be some appearances from Demelza's brothers, who up to now have not featured in the series.

Jamestown

When I first drafted this blog, Jamestown had not started but due to a delay in my posting ability, this new period drama has recently started on Sky One. It is an 8-part series from the producers of Downton Abbey and written by Bill Gallagher who wrote 'Lark Rise to Candleford' and 'The Paradise' which is another one of my favourite shows. I was initially disappointed to hear Julian Fellowes was not writing it, but then again I would also like to see him work on a film again, like Gosford Park, rather than tie himself into another tv series.

Photo Source: Good Housekeeping
So we are three episodes in to this season which charts the early days of Jamestown, the first English settlement in Virginia in the early 1600's. At the moment I have to say I sit on the fence with this programme. I really enjoyed the first episode which saw a shipment full of women bought and brought over from England to marry the camp of men who had been in the colony for 12 years establishing the tiny town and who were now ready to marry and reproduce. I think this is a fascinating historical fact which I didn't realise happened until the programme started. Whilst these women got adventure and the promise of a new life, they were also pre-assigned husbands and as we see in episode one, they aren't necessarily kind to the women. Inequality of the sexes is one of the main facets of the programme, which I think is great that they show, but I have to say some of the female characters they have written I really don't like. Also everyone in the show appears to be from Yorkshire or Lancashire . . . I'm going to have to research that to see if that is a historical accuracy or not!

Catch up on the episodes on NowTV and let me know what you think!

Dunkirk

Photo Source: TheYoungFolks
Arriving in cinemas in the UK and US on 21 July this year, this period drama starring Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy and Kenneth Brannagh, three of my favourite male actors, promises much as it tells the harrowing and true story of the evacuation of allied soldiers from the war-torn beaches of Dunkirk.

Whilst I usually prefer period dramas based around country houses or a romantic theme, I am also captivated by war movies. I will admit that I don't know much about Dunkirk other than what you learn in history lessons at school and what I learned through the movie Atonement, another amazing period movie. I am very excited to watch this movie, written and directed by Christopher Nolan who brought us amazing films such the Batman Dark Knight movies, Inception (still one of my favourite films) and Interstellar. He's an intelligent writer and an amazing director, so I have high hopes for this movie.

Outlander Season 3

This has far and away been my favourite period drama of the last couple of years. The soundtrack is phenomenal, written by Bear McCreary, who also wrote The Walking Dead theme tune, but the story is everything you want from a highland drama. There are beautiful women, handsome rugged kilted men, and stunning sweeping views of the highlands of Scotland. I love the strong female characters in this series, especially Jennie, Jamie's sister!

Photo Source: iTechPost
Season three is the first season run by US TV company Starz, the first two seasons created by Amazon themselves, and this makes me a little wary. Programmes from Starz are not usually my favourite as they struggle with authenticity in terms of their costume, set design and general historical accuracy. They seem to choose to sexualise their female characters and sacrifice history for colour and rich settings.

Hopefully this will not be the case with season 3 of Outlander, and it will continue to be just as good as the previous seasons. This season we see Claire and Jamie continue their trans-century relationship, struggling initially to come to terms with being separated and then eventually meeting up again. Whilst the release date has not been confirmed, we do know the show will air in September, getting us ready for an Autumn of period drama.

So there you go, here are some of the top picks in period drama coming to our screens this Summer. I will be back later in the season to tell you more about what to expect in the Autumn and running up to Christmas - usually prime period drama time!

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See you soon!