Picturing Men
Title | Picturing Men PDF eBook |
Author | John Ibson |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2006 |
Genre | Male friendship |
ISBN | 9780226368580 |
These photographs, spanning from before the Civil War to the 1950s, reveal a lost world. Rather than imposing contemporary notions of sexuality by assuming the images only illustrate a portion of the gay past, Ibson returns them to their own time to examine what they meant to the subjects. His perspective unearths a hidden aspect of American men's history. 140 photos.
Picturing Harrisonburg
Title | Picturing Harrisonburg PDF eBook |
Author | David Ehrenpreis |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2017 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9781938086502 |
"While this book is a stand-alone project, it also serves as the accompanying catalogue for the large-scale exhibition on view at JMU's Duke Hall Gallery of Fine Art during the fall of 2017." -- from page 12
Picturing a Nation
Title | Picturing a Nation PDF eBook |
Author | David M. Lubin |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 400 |
Release | 1994-01-01 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9780300057324 |
Art historian David Lubin examines the work of six nineteenth-century American artists to show how their paintings both embraced and resisted dominant social values. Lubin argues that artists such as George Bingham and Lily Martin Spencer were aware of the underlying social conflicts of their time and that their work reflected the nation's ambivalence toward domesticity, its conflicting ideas about child rearing, its racial disharmony, and many other issues central to the formation of modern America.--From publisher description.
Picturing Frederick Douglass: An Illustrated Biography of the Nineteenth Century's Most Photographed American
Title | Picturing Frederick Douglass: An Illustrated Biography of the Nineteenth Century's Most Photographed American PDF eBook |
Author | Celeste-Marie Bernier |
Publisher | W. W. Norton & Company |
Pages | 791 |
Release | 2015-11-02 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1631491261 |
Finalist for the Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize A landmark and collectible volume—beautifully produced in duotone—that canonizes Frederick Douglass through historic photography. Commemorating the bicentennial of Frederick Douglass’s birthday and featuring images discovered since its original publication in 2015, this “tour de force” (Library Journal, starred review) reintroduced Frederick Douglass to a twenty-first-century audience. From these pages—which include over 160 photographs of Douglass, as well as his previously unpublished writings and speeches on visual aesthetics—we learn that neither Custer nor Twain, nor even Abraham Lincoln, was the most photographed American of the nineteenth century. Indeed, it was Frederick Douglass, the ex-slave-turned-abolitionist, eloquent orator, and seminal writer, who is canonized here as a leading pioneer in photography and a prescient theorist who believed in the explosive social power of what was then just an emerging art form. Featuring: Contributions from Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and Kenneth B. Morris, Jr. (a direct Douglass descendent) 160 separate photographs of Douglass—many of which have never been publicly seen and were long lost to history A collection of contemporaneous artwork that shows how powerful Douglass’s photographic legacy remains today, over a century after his death All Douglass’s previously unpublished writings and speeches on visual aesthetics
Picture Freedom
Title | Picture Freedom PDF eBook |
Author | Jasmine Nichole Cobb |
Publisher | NYU Press |
Pages | 291 |
Release | 2015-04-03 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1479817228 |
"Picture Freedom provides a unique and nuanced interpretation of nineteenth-century African American life and culture. Focusing on visuality, print culture, and an examination of the parlor, Cobb has fashioned a book like none other, convincingly demonstrating how whites and blacks reimagined racial identity and belonging in the early republic."--Erica Armstrong Dunbar, author of A Fragile Freedom: African American Women and Emancipation in the Antebellum City
Words, Books, Images, and the Long Eighteenth Century
Title | Words, Books, Images, and the Long Eighteenth Century PDF eBook |
Author | Antoinina Bevan Zlatar |
Publisher | John Benjamins Publishing Company |
Pages | 270 |
Release | 2021-12-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9027258449 |
The essays collected in this volume engage in a conversation among lexicography, the culture of the book, and the canonization and commemoration of English literary figures and their works in the long eighteenth century. The source of inspiration for each piece is Allen Reddick’s scholarship on Samuel Johnson (1709-1784), the great English lexicographer whose Dictionary (1755) included thousands upon thousands of illustrative quotations from the “best” authors, and, more recently, on Thomas Hollis (1720-1774), the much less well-known bibliophile who sent gifts of books by a pantheon of Whig authors to individuals and libraries in Britain, Protestant bastions in continental Europe, and America. Between the covers of Words, Books, Images readers will encounter canonical English authors of prose and poetry—Bacon, Milton, Defoe, Dryden, Pope, Richardson, Swift, Byron, Mary Shelley, and Edward Lear. But they will also become acquainted with the agents of their canonization and commemoration—the printers and publishers of Grub Street, the biographer John Aubrey, the lexicographer and biographer Johnson, the bibliophile Hollis, and the portrait painter Reynolds. No less crucially, they will meet fellow readers of then and now—women and men who peruse, poach, snip, and savour a book’s every word and image.
Picturing History at the Ottoman Court
Title | Picturing History at the Ottoman Court PDF eBook |
Author | Emine Fetvacı |
Publisher | Indiana University Press |
Pages | 332 |
Release | 2013 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 0253006783 |
Traces the simultaneous crafting of political power, the codification of a historical record, and the unfolding of cultural change