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Primitive Passions - Visuality, Sexuality, Ethnography, and Contemporary Chinese Cinema (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,882
Discovery Miles 28 820
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Primitive Passions - Visuality, Sexuality, Ethnography, and Contemporary Chinese Cinema (Hardcover, New)
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Each year in the United States, millions of mass-produced greeting
cards proclaim their occasional messages: "For My Loving Daughter,"
"On the Occasion of Your Marriage," and "It's a Boy!" For more than
150 years, greeting cards have tapped into and organized a shared
language of love, affection, and kinship, becoming an integral part
of American life and culture. Contemporary incarnations of these
emotional transactions performed through small bits of decorated
paper are often dismissed as vacuous cliches employing worn-out
stereotypes. Nevertheless, the relationship of greeting cards to
systems of material production is well worth studying and
understanding, for the modern greeting card is the product of an
industry whose values and aims seem to contradict the sentiments
that most cards express. In fact, greeting cards articulate
shifting forms of love and affiliation experienced by people whose
lives have been shaped by the major economic changes of the late
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A Token of My Affection shows
in fascinating detail how the evolution of the greeting card
reveals the fundamental power of economic organization to enable
and constrain experiences of longing, status, desire, social
connectedness, and love and to structure and partially determine
the most private, internal, and intimate of feelings.Beautifully
illustrated, A Token of My Affection follows the development of the
modern greeting card industry from the 1840s, as a way of
recovering that most elusive of things -- the emotional
subjectivity of another age. Barry Shank charts the evolution of
the greeting card from an afterthought to a traditional printing
and stationery business in the mid-nineteenth century to a
multibillion-dollar industry a hundred years later. He explains
what an industry devoted to emotional sincerity means for the lives
of all Americans. Blending archival research in business history
with a study of surviving artifacts and a literary analysis of a
broad range of relevant texts and primary sources, Shank
demonstrates the power of business to affect love and the ability
of love to find its way in the marketplace of consumer society.
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