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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > 1600 to 1800
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Immersive Words - Mass Media, Visuality, and American Literature, 1839-1893 (Hardcover, 2)
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Immersive Words - Mass Media, Visuality, and American Literature, 1839-1893 (Hardcover, 2)
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Immersive Words traces how innovations in visual practices and
aesthetics in the nineteenth century changed the aesthetics of
American literature with profound consequences for America's
evolving national identity. In Immersive Words, Michelle Jarenski
demonstrates that the contempo rary challenge that visual images
and virtual environments in cinema and photography, on the web, and
in video games pose to reading and writing are not contemporary
developments but equally exercised the imaginations, anxieties, and
works of nineteenth-century authors. The middle of the nineteenth
century witnessed the emergence of numerous visual technologies and
techniques: the daguerreotype, immersive exhibition spaces such as
cycloramas and panoramas, mechanized tourism, and large-scale
exhibitions and spectacles such as the World's Fair. In closely
argued chapters devoted to these four visual forms, Jarenski
demonstrates that the popularity of these novel ties catalysed a
shift by authors of the period beyond narratives that merely
described images to ones that invoked aesthetic experiences. She
describes how Herman Melville adapts the aesthetic of the
daguerreotype through his use of dramatic point-of-view and unex
pected shifts that disorient readers. Frederick Douglass is shown
to appropriate a panoramic aesthetic that severs spatial and
temporal narratives from standard expectations. Immersive Words
traces how Na thaniel Hawthorne's The Marble Faun found success as
a travel guide to Rome, though intended as a work of serious
fiction. Finally, Sarah Orne Jewett simulates the interactivity of
the World Columbian Exposition to promote racialized and gendered
forms of aesthetic communica tion. These techniques and strategies
drawn from visual forms blur the just-so boundary critics and
theorists have traditionally drawn between text and image. In the
mid-nineteenth century, the national identity of the United States
remained fluid and hinged upon matters of gender, sexual ity, and,
crucially, race. Authors both reflected that evolving identity and
contributed to its ongoing evolution. In demonstrating how the
aesthetic and visual technologies of the nineteenth century changed
the fundamental aesthetics of American literature, the importance
of Immersive Words goes far beyond literary criticism.
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