Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies > 16th to 18th centuries
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Arras Hanging - The Textile That Determined Early Modern Literature and Drama (Hardcover)
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Arras Hanging - The Textile That Determined Early Modern Literature and Drama (Hardcover)
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Textiles have long provided metaphors for storytelling: a
compelling novel "weaves a tapestry" and we enjoy hearing someone
"spin" a tale. To what extent, however, should we take these
metaphors seriously? Arras Hanging: The Textile That Determined
Early Modern Literature and Drama reveals that in the early modern
period, when cloth-making was ubiquitous and high-quality
tapestries called arras hangings were the most valuable objects in
England, such metaphors were literal. The arras in particular
provided a narrative model for writers such as Edmund Spenser and
William Shakespeare, who exploited their audience's familiarity
with weaving to engage them in highly idiosyncratic and "hands on"
ways. Specifically, undescribed or "blank" tapestries in the
period's fiction presented audiences with opportunities to "see"
whatever they desired, and thus weave themselves into the story.
Far more than background objects, literary and dramatic arras
hangings have much to teach us about the intersections between
texts and textiles at the dawn of print, and, more broadly, about
the status of visual art in post-Reformation England.
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