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Writing material culture history / edited by Anne Gerritsen and Giorgio Riello.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Series: Writing historyPublication details: London : Bloomsbury Academic, 2021.Edition: 2ndDescription: 368 pages. 100 bw illus 234 x 156 mmISBN:
  • 9781350105218
  • 9781350105225
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Writing material culture historyDDC classification:
  • 306.09 23
Contents:
List of Figures Notes on Contributors Introduction: Material Culture History: Methods, Practices and Disciplines, Anne Gerritsen and Giorgio Riello Object in Focus 1. Broken Saints, House Cats, Other Historical Matter, Dana Leibsohn Part I: The Disciplines of Material Culture 1. Material Culture and the History of Art(efacts), Viccy Coltman 2. Written Texts and the Performance of Materiality, Catherine Richardson 3. Anthropology, Archaeology, History and the Material Culture of Lycra®, Kaori O'Connor Object in Focus 2: Material Culture, Archaeology and Defining Modernity: Case Studies in Ceramic Research, David Gaimster Object in Focus 3: Father Amiot's Cup: A Qing Imperial Porcelain Sent to the Court of Louis XV and - Kee Il Choi Object in Focus 4: Broken Objects: Using Archaeological Ceramics in the Study of Material Culture, Suzanne Findlen Hood Object in Focus 5: Writing Our Maritime Pasts: The Belitung Shipwreck Controversy, Natali Pearson Object in Focus 6: Identity, Heritage and Memorialisation: The Toraja Tongkonan of Indonesia, Kathleen M. Adams Object in Focus 7: History by Design: The UK Board of Trade Design Register, Dinah Eastop Part II: The Methods of Material Culture 4. Spaces of Global Interactions: The Material Landscapes of Global History, Anne Gerritsen and Giorgio Riello 5. Material Culture and Materialism: The French Revolution in Wallpaper, Ulrich Lehmann 6. How Things Shape Us: Material Culture and Identity in the Industrial Age, Manuel Charpy Object in Focus 8: Invisible Beds: Health and the Material Culture of Sleep, Sandra Cavallo Object in Focus 9: Material Culture and Sound: A Sixteenth-Century Handbell, Flora Dennis Object in Focus 10: Interwoven Knowledge: The Understanding and Conservation of Three Carpets, Jessica Hallett and Raquel Santos Object in Focus 11: Lustrous Things: Luminosity and Reflection before the Light Bulb, Ann Smart Martin Object in Focus 12: Cosmopolitan Relationships in the Crossroads of the Pacific Ocean, Christina Hellmich Object in Focus 13: Digital Microscopy and Early Modern Embroidery, Stefan Hanß Object in Focus 14: Objects of Emotions: The London Foundling Hospital Tokens, 1741-60, John Styles Object in Focus 15: Time, Wear and Maintenance: The Afterlife of Things, Victoria Kelley Part III: The Preservation and Interpretation of Material Culture 7. The Return of the Wunderkammer: Material Culture in the Museum 225, Ethan W. Lasser 8. Handle with Care: The Future of Curatorial Expertise, Glenn Adamson 9. As Seen on the Screen: Material Culture, Historical Accuracy and the Costume Drama, Hannah Greig Object in Focus 16: Europe 1600-1800 in a Thousand Objects, Lesley Ellis Miller Object in Focus 17: Reading and Writing the Restoration History of an Old French bureau, Carolyn Sargentson Object in Focus 18: Objects of Empire: Museums, Material Culture, and Histories of Empire, John McAleer Object in Focus 19: The Lost Heritage of China: Dismantling Beijing, Digitizing Beijing, Di Lou Object in Focus 20: 'Black Gold': Industrial Heritage of the Nineteenth-century Ruhr Area, Christian Kleinschmidt Object in Focus 21: Indigeneity and Race and the Politics of Museum Collections, Beverly Lemire Object in Focus 22: Acts of creation: debating Indigenous American repatriation from Britain, Jack Davy Index
Summary: "This new edition of Writing Material Culture History examines the methodologies currently used in the historical study of material culture. Touching on archaeology, anthropology, art history and literary studies, the book provides history students with a fundamental understanding of the relationship between artefacts and historical narratives. The role of museums, the impact of the digital age and the representations of objects in public history are just some of the issues addressed in a book that brings together distinguished scholars from around the world"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
General Books General Books CUTN Central Library Social Sciences Non-fiction 306.09 GER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 46560

Includes bibliographical references and index.

List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Introduction: Material Culture History: Methods, Practices and Disciplines, Anne Gerritsen and Giorgio Riello
Object in Focus 1. Broken Saints, House Cats, Other Historical Matter, Dana Leibsohn

Part I: The Disciplines of Material Culture
1. Material Culture and the History of Art(efacts), Viccy Coltman
2. Written Texts and the Performance of Materiality, Catherine Richardson
3. Anthropology, Archaeology, History and the Material Culture of Lycra®, Kaori O'Connor
Object in Focus 2: Material Culture, Archaeology and Defining Modernity: Case Studies in Ceramic Research, David Gaimster
Object in Focus 3: Father Amiot's Cup: A Qing Imperial Porcelain Sent to the Court of Louis XV and - Kee Il Choi
Object in Focus 4: Broken Objects: Using Archaeological Ceramics in the Study of Material Culture, Suzanne Findlen Hood
Object in Focus 5: Writing Our Maritime Pasts: The Belitung Shipwreck Controversy, Natali Pearson
Object in Focus 6: Identity, Heritage and Memorialisation: The Toraja Tongkonan of Indonesia, Kathleen M. Adams
Object in Focus 7: History by Design: The UK Board of Trade Design Register, Dinah Eastop


Part II: The Methods of Material Culture
4. Spaces of Global Interactions: The Material Landscapes of Global History, Anne Gerritsen and Giorgio Riello
5. Material Culture and Materialism: The French Revolution in Wallpaper, Ulrich Lehmann
6. How Things Shape Us: Material Culture and Identity in the Industrial Age, Manuel Charpy


Object in Focus 8: Invisible Beds: Health and the Material Culture of Sleep, Sandra Cavallo
Object in Focus 9: Material Culture and Sound: A Sixteenth-Century Handbell, Flora Dennis
Object in Focus 10: Interwoven Knowledge: The Understanding and Conservation of Three Carpets, Jessica Hallett and Raquel Santos
Object in Focus 11: Lustrous Things: Luminosity and Reflection before the Light Bulb, Ann Smart Martin
Object in Focus 12: Cosmopolitan Relationships in the Crossroads of the Pacific Ocean, Christina Hellmich
Object in Focus 13: Digital Microscopy and Early Modern Embroidery, Stefan Hanß
Object in Focus 14: Objects of Emotions: The London Foundling Hospital Tokens, 1741-60, John Styles
Object in Focus 15: Time, Wear and Maintenance: The Afterlife of Things, Victoria Kelley

Part III: The Preservation and Interpretation of Material Culture
7. The Return of the Wunderkammer: Material Culture in the Museum 225, Ethan W. Lasser
8. Handle with Care: The Future of Curatorial Expertise, Glenn Adamson
9. As Seen on the Screen: Material Culture, Historical Accuracy and the Costume Drama, Hannah Greig

Object in Focus 16: Europe 1600-1800 in a Thousand Objects, Lesley Ellis Miller
Object in Focus 17: Reading and Writing the Restoration History of an Old French bureau, Carolyn Sargentson
Object in Focus 18: Objects of Empire: Museums, Material Culture, and Histories of Empire, John McAleer
Object in Focus 19: The Lost Heritage of China: Dismantling Beijing, Digitizing Beijing, Di Lou
Object in Focus 20: 'Black Gold': Industrial Heritage of the Nineteenth-century Ruhr Area, Christian Kleinschmidt
Object in Focus 21: Indigeneity and Race and the Politics of Museum Collections, Beverly Lemire
Object in Focus 22: Acts of creation: debating Indigenous American repatriation from Britain, Jack Davy

Index

"This new edition of Writing Material Culture History examines the methodologies currently used in the historical study of material culture. Touching on archaeology, anthropology, art history and literary studies, the book provides history students with a fundamental understanding of the relationship between artefacts and historical narratives. The role of museums, the impact of the digital age and the representations of objects in public history are just some of the issues addressed in a book that brings together distinguished scholars from around the world"--

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