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The Power Of Objects In Eighteenthcentury British America Jennifer Van Horn

  • SKU: BELL-7351192
The Power Of Objects In Eighteenthcentury British America Jennifer Van Horn
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Power Of Objects In Eighteenthcentury British America Jennifer Van Horn instant download after payment.

Publisher: Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 13.86 MB
Pages: 456
Author: Jennifer Van Horn
ISBN: 9781469629568, 1469629569
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

The Power Of Objects In Eighteenthcentury British America Jennifer Van Horn by Jennifer Van Horn 9781469629568, 1469629569 instant download after payment.

Over the course of the eighteenth century, Anglo-Americans purchased an unprecedented number and array of goods.The Power of Objects in Eighteenth-Century British Americainvestigates these diverse artifacts--from portraits and city views to gravestones, dressing furniture, and prosthetic devices--to explore how elite American consumers assembled objects to form a new civil society on the margins of the British Empire. In this interdisciplinary transatlantic study, artifacts emerge as key players in the formation of Anglo-American communities and eventually of American citizenship. Deftly interweaving analysis of images with furniture, architecture, clothing, and literary works, Van Horn reconstructs the networks of goods that bound together consumers in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston.
Moving beyond emulation and the desire for social status as the primary motivators for consumption, Van Horn shows that Anglo-Americans' material choices were intimately bound up with their efforts to distance themselves from Native Americans and African Americans. She also traces women's contested place in forging provincial culture. As encountered through a woman's application of makeup at her dressing table or an amputee's donning of a wooden leg after the Revolutionary War, material artifacts were far from passive markers of rank or political identification. They made Anglo-American society.

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