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"Bah! Humbug!" and "God bless us, every one!" are phrases that have
resounded through the years, instantly recognizable as exclamations
from Scrooge and Tiny Tim in Charles Dickens's beloved Christmas
Carol. Told and retold to generations of children and adults, A
Christmas Carol has been adapted, revised, condensed, added to, and
modernized more than any other work in English literature. In this
engaging and delightfully illustrated book, Paul Davis explores the
various British and American versions of this work--on stage, film,
radio, and television and in literature, cartoons, and comic
books--showing how these interpretations have reflected the
changing cultural perspectives of successive eras. According to
Davis, six periods have shaped this cultural history, each
contributing to the evolving culture-text of A Christmas Carol that
is what we remember of all its parodies, piracies, and retellings.
Dickens's original story, written in 1843, provided proof that
urbanization had not destroyed Christmas and that the old country
traditions could flourish in the new cities. By the 1870s, A
Christmas Carol had become secular scripture, read as a retelling
of the biblical Christmas story. The sophisticated decade preceding
World War I treated the work for the first time as a story for
children. In the Depression era, while the British reaffirmed a
traditional Carol, Americans interpreted Scrooge's transformation
as the triumph of a new business ethic of service and sharing. The
Scrooge of the 1960s became a Freudian figure tormented by his
past, who conjured up Marley as a way of calling for help and who
turned on to Christmas and tuned into joys he had denied himself.
Now, when our focus in on hunger and homelessness rather than joy
in the streets, Scrooge is again a social figure placed in the
center of unsettling economic realities.
An extremely comprehensive, fully illustrated guide to the history
and evolution of the castle under Wales' native rulers
(c.1066-1283). Spectacular aerial photography, plans and
reconstruction drawings examine the various architectural designs
and layouts that created the distinctive form of the Welsh castle.
-- Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru
A revealing look at ancient art in the Menil Collection that
addresses the problem of objects lacking archaeological context
This innovative presentation of ancient objects in the Menil
Collection offers a new model for understanding works from
antiquity that lack archaeological context. Editors John North
Hopkins, Sarah Kielt Costello, and Paul R. Davis with 11 additional
authors employ a creative mixture of iconography, technical
studies, and known provenance to gain insight into both the meaning
of the objects themselves and what they can teach us more broadly
about archaeology, art history, and collecting practices. As they
take on complex issues of cultural heritage, legality, and taste,
these essays bring to life works that are often consigned to either
the imperial past or conceptual limbo and introduce a fresh
framework through which to engage with the multilayered history
that these objects represent.
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