![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments
This book reveals a new history of the imagination told through its engagement with the body. Even as they denounced the imagination's potential for inviting luxury, vice, and corruption, American audiences avidly consumed a transatlantic visual culture of touring paintings, dioramas, gift books, and theatrical performances that pictured a preindustrial-and largely imaginary-European past. By examining the visual, material, and rhetorical strategies artists like Washington Allston, Asher B. Durand, Thomas Cole, and others used to navigate this treacherous ground, Catherine Holochwost uncovers a hidden tension in antebellum aesthetics. The book will be of interest to scholars of art history, literary and cultural history, critical race studies, performance studies, and media studies.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Islamic Biomedical Ethics Principles and…
Abdulaziz Sachedina
Hardcover
R2,331
Discovery Miles 23 310
What is Islamophobia? - Racism, Social…
Narzanin Massoumi, Tom Mills, …
Hardcover
R2,827
Discovery Miles 28 270
Tempests, Poxes, Predators, and People…
L Michael Romero, John C. Wingfield
Hardcover
R4,413
Discovery Miles 44 130
|