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"Material culture in literature."
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The Materiality of Middle English Anchoritic Devotion
2021
Anchorites and their texts, such as Ancrene Wisse, have recently undergone a reevaluation based on material circumstances, not just theological import. The articles here address a variety of anchoritic or anchoritic-adjacent texts, encompassing guidance literature, hagiographies, miracle narratives, medical discourse, and mystic prose, and spanning in date from the eighth through the fourteenth centuries. Exploring reclusion and materiality, the collection addresses a series of overlapping themes, including the importance of touch, the limits of religious authority, and the role of the senses. Objects, metaphorical and real, embodied and spiritual, populate the pages. These categories are permeable, with flexible and porous boundaries, demonstrating the conflation of ideas, concepts, and manifestations in medieval materiality. In fact, the permeability of these categories demonstrates how materiality can reshape our approach to medieval texts. It leaves room for directions for future study, including the application of material analysis to previously unstudied objects, spaces, and literary artifacts.
The Materiality of Middle English Anchoritic Devotion
2022
Anchorites and their texts, such as Ancrene Wisse , have recently undergone a reevaluation based on material circumstances, not just theological import. The articles here address a variety of anchoritic or anchoritic-adjacent texts, encompassing guidance literature, hagiographies, miracle narratives, medical discourse, and mystic prose, and spanning in date from the eighth through the fourteenth centuries. Exploring reclusion and materiality, the collection addresses a series of overlapping themes, including the importance of touch, the limits of religious authority, and the role of the senses. Objects, metaphorical and real, embodied and spiritual, populate the pages. These categories are permeable, with flexible and porous boundaries, demonstrating the conflation of ideas, concepts, and manifestations in medieval materiality. In fact, the permeability of these categories demonstrates how materiality can reshape our approach to medieval texts. It leaves room for directions for future study, including the application of material analysis to previously unstudied objects, spaces, and literary artifacts.
The Materiality of Middle English Anchoritic Devotion
by
Sauer, Michelle M
,
Bledsoe, Jenny C
in
anchorites
,
ancrenne wisse
,
Christian literature, English (Middle)
2021
Anchorites and their texts, such as Ancrene Wisse, have recently undergone a reevaluation based on material circumstances, not just theological import. The articles here address a variety of anchoritic or anchoritic-adjacent texts, encompassing guidance literature, hagiographies, miracle narratives, medical discourse, and mystic prose, and spanning in date from the eighth through the fourteenth centuries. Exploring reclusion and materiality, the collection addresses a series of overlapping themes, including the importance of touch, the limits of religious authority, and the role of the senses. Objects, metaphorical and real, embodied and spiritual, populate the pages. These categories are permeable, with flexible and porous boundaries, demonstrating the conflation of ideas, concepts, and manifestations in medieval materiality.
Material World
2021
Scholars from ancient and early modern studies, art history, literary criticism, philosophy, and the history of science explore the interplay between nature, science, and art in influential ancient texts and their reception in the Renaissance.
The Practice of Misuse
by
Malewitz, Raymond
in
20th century
,
American Literature
,
American literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism
2014,2020
In the age of Ikea Hackers and salvagepunks, this book charts the emergence of \"rugged consumers\" who creatively misuse, reuse, and repurpose the objects within their environments to suit their idiosyncratic needs and desires. Figures of both literary and material culture whose behavior evokes an American can-do ethic, rugged consumers mediate between older mythic models of self-sufficiency and the consumption-driven realities of our passive, post-industrial economy. Through their unorthodox encounters with the material world, rugged consumers show that using objects 'properly' is a conventional behavior that must be renewed and reinforced rather than a naturalized process that persists untroubled through time and space.
At the same time, this Utopian ideal is rarely met: most examples of rugged consumerism conceal rather than foreground the ideological problems to which they respond and thus support or ignore rather than challenge the structures of late capitalist consumerism. By analyzing convergences and divergences between subjective material practices and collectivist politics, Raymond Malewitz shows how rugged consumerism both recodes and reflects the dynamic social history of objects in the United States from the 1960s to the present.
Willa Cather and Material Culture
2009,2005
A compilation of essays focusing on the significance of
material culture to Cather’s work and Cather
scholarship.
Willa Cather and Material Culture is a collection of 11
new essays that tap into a recent and resurgent interest among
Cather scholars in addressing her work and her career through the
lens of cultural studies. One of the volume's primary purposes is
to demonstrate the extent to which Cather did participate in her
culture and to correct the commonplace view of her as a literary
connoisseur set apart from her times.
The contributors explore both the objects among which Cather
lived and the objects that appear in her writings, as well as the
commercial constraints of the publishing industry in which her
art was made and marketed. Essays address her relationship to
quilts both personally and as symbols in her work; her
contributions to domestic magazines such as
Home Monthly and
Woman's Home Companion ; the problematic nature of
Hollywood productions of her work; and her efforts and successes
as a businesswoman. By establishing the centrality of material
matters to her writing, these essays contribute to the reclaiming
of Cather as a modernist and highlight the significance of
material culture, in general, to the study of American
literature.
Portable property
2008
What fueled the Victorian passion for hair-jewelry and memorial rings? When would an everyday object metamorphose from commodity to precious relic? InPortable Property, John Plotz examines the new role played by portable objects in persuading Victorian Britons that they could travel abroad with religious sentiments, family ties, and national identity intact. In an empire defined as much by the circulation of capital as by force of arms, the challenge of preserving Englishness while living overseas became a central Victorian preoccupation, creating a pressing need for objects that could readily travel abroad as personifications of Britishness. At the same time a radically new relationship between cash value and sentimental associations arose in certain resonant mementoes--in teacups, rings, sprigs of heather, and handkerchiefs, but most of all in books.
Portable Propertyexamines how culture-bearing objects came to stand for distant people and places, creating or preserving a sense of self and community despite geographic dislocation. Victorian novels--because they themselves came to be understood as the quintessential portable property--tell the story of this change most clearly. Plotz analyzes a wide range of works, paying particular attention to George Eliot'sDaniel Deronda, Anthony Trollope'sEustace Diamonds, and R. D. Blackmore'sLorna Doone. He also discusses Thomas Hardy and William Morris's vehement attack on the very notion of cultural portability. The result is a richer understanding of the role of objects in British culture at home and abroad during the Age of Empire.
Some images inside the book are unavailable due to digital copyright restrictions.
Dress Culture in Late Victorian Women's Fiction
2009,2016
In her immensely readable and richly documented book, Christine Bayles Kortsch asks us to shift our understanding of late Victorian literary culture by examining its inextricable relationship with the material culture of dress and sewing. Even as the Education Acts of 1870, 1880, and 1891 extended the privilege of print literacy to greater numbers of the populace, stitching samplers continued to be a way of acculturating girls in both print literacy and what Kortsch terms &dquotedress culture.&dquote Kortsch explores nineteenth-century women's education, sewing and needlework, mainstream fashion, alternative dress movements, working-class labor in the textile industry, and forms of social activism, showing how dual literacy in dress and print cultures linked women writers with their readers. Focusing on Victorian novels written between 1870 and 1900, Kortsch examines fiction by writers such as Olive Schreiner, Ella Hepworth Dixon, Margaret Oliphant, Sarah Grand, and Gertrude Dix, with attention to influential predecessors like Elizabeth Gaskell, Charlotte Brontë, and George Eliot. Periodicals, with their juxtaposition of journalism, fiction, and articles on dress and sewing are particularly fertile sites for exploring the close linkages between print and dress cultures. Informed by her examinations of costume collections in British and American museums, Kortsch's book broadens our view of New Woman fiction and its relationship both to dress culture and to contemporary women's fiction.
Dynamic Matter
2022
Dynamic Matter investigates the life histories of
Renaissance objects. Eschewing the critical tendency to study how
objects relate to human needs and desires, this work foregrounds
the objects themselves, demonstrating their potential to transform
their environments as they travel across time and space.
Integrating early modern material theories with recent critical
approaches in Actor-Network Theory and object-oriented ontology,
this volume extends Aristotle's theory of dynameos -which
conceptualizes matter as potentiality-and applies it to objects
featured in early modern texts such as Edmund Spenser's The
Faerie Queene , Robert Hooke's Micrographia , and
William Shakespeare's The Tempest . Individual chapters
explore the dynameos of matter by examining its
manifestations in particular forms: combs are inscribed with words
and brushed through human hair; feathers are incorporated into
garments and artwork; Prince Rupert's glasswork drops explode; a
whale becomes animated by the power of a magical bracelet; and
books are drowned. These case studies highlight the potentiality
matter itself possesses and that which it activates in other
matter.
A theorization of objects grounded in Renaissance materialist
thought, Dynamic Matter examines the richness of things
themselves; the larger, multiple, and changing networks in which
things circulate; and the networks created by these transformative
objects.
In addition to the editor, the contributors to this volume
include Anna Riehl Bertolet, Erika Mary Boeckeler, Naomi Howell,
Emily E. F. Philbrick, Josie Schoel, Maria Shmygol, Edward McLean
Test, Abbie Weinberg, and Sarah F. Williams.