Women and the Material Culture of Death
Herausgeber: Goggin, Maureen Daly; Tobin, Beth Fowkes
Women and the Material Culture of Death
Herausgeber: Goggin, Maureen Daly; Tobin, Beth Fowkes
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Examining the compelling and often poignant connection between women and the material culture of death, this collection looks at the objects women make, the images they keep, the practices they use or are responsible for, and the places they inhabit and construct through ritual and custom. Women's material practices are explored as well as women's affective responses and sentimental labor that mark their expected and unexpected participation in the social practices surrounding death and the dead.
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Examining the compelling and often poignant connection between women and the material culture of death, this collection looks at the objects women make, the images they keep, the practices they use or are responsible for, and the places they inhabit and construct through ritual and custom. Women's material practices are explored as well as women's affective responses and sentimental labor that mark their expected and unexpected participation in the social practices surrounding death and the dead.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9781409444169
- ISBN-10: 1409444163
- Artikelnr.: 41246643
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 406
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. November 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9781409444169
- ISBN-10: 1409444163
- Artikelnr.: 41246643
Maureen Daly Goggin is Professor and Chair in the Department of English, Arizona State University, USA. Beth Fowkes Tobin is Professor of English and Women's Studies at the University of Georgia, USA.
Contents: Connecting women and death: an introduction, Beth Fowkes Tobin
and Maureen Daly Goggin; Part I Mourning Practices: Widows and courtesans,
'pizzocchere' and nuns: women in mourning in the Venetian Republic,
1400-1800, Isabella Campagnol; Fashioning death/gendering sentiment:
mourning jewelry in Britain in the 18th-century, Arianne Fennetaux;
Emotions and rituals: responses to death among the nobility in modern
France, Elizabeth C. Macknight; Stitching (in) death: 18th- and
19th-century American and English mourning samplers, Maureen Daly Goggin;
'The thing they knew': social exclusion at Southern wakes in Eudora Welty's
The Wanderers and The Optimist's Daughter, Laura Patterson; 'Confessional'
poetry and the material culture of death, Gillian D. Steinberg. Part II
Memorializing: Columbia mourns: the distaff side of Washington's long
farewell, Meredith Eliassen; More than 'a heap of dust': the material
memorialization of three 19th-century women's graves, Elizabethada A.
Wright; Domesticating death in the sentimental republic: commemorating and
mourning in US civil war nurses' memoirs, Ashley Byock; 'Une fleur que ses
yeux éteints ne peuvent plus contempler': women's sculpture for the dead,
Marjan Sterckx; Spectacle, maintenance, and materiality: women and death in
modern Brittany, Maura Coughlin; A conversation with Aunt Carol: the fluid
functionality of funeral programs in African-American culture, Michelle J.
Pinkard; From private places to public spaces: mourning and death in the
art of four 21st-century women, Kathryn Beattie. Part III Bodily Practices:
Reading material culture: British women's position and the death trade in
the long 18th century, Michelle Iwen; Hadley chests: a reflection on the
chaos and sacrifice of childbirth, B.A. Harrington; 'Feel how soft her hair
is': Amish women's practices on the female body, Violet A. Dutcher;
Representing corporeal 'truth' in the work of Anna Morandi Manzolini and
Mada
and Maureen Daly Goggin; Part I Mourning Practices: Widows and courtesans,
'pizzocchere' and nuns: women in mourning in the Venetian Republic,
1400-1800, Isabella Campagnol; Fashioning death/gendering sentiment:
mourning jewelry in Britain in the 18th-century, Arianne Fennetaux;
Emotions and rituals: responses to death among the nobility in modern
France, Elizabeth C. Macknight; Stitching (in) death: 18th- and
19th-century American and English mourning samplers, Maureen Daly Goggin;
'The thing they knew': social exclusion at Southern wakes in Eudora Welty's
The Wanderers and The Optimist's Daughter, Laura Patterson; 'Confessional'
poetry and the material culture of death, Gillian D. Steinberg. Part II
Memorializing: Columbia mourns: the distaff side of Washington's long
farewell, Meredith Eliassen; More than 'a heap of dust': the material
memorialization of three 19th-century women's graves, Elizabethada A.
Wright; Domesticating death in the sentimental republic: commemorating and
mourning in US civil war nurses' memoirs, Ashley Byock; 'Une fleur que ses
yeux éteints ne peuvent plus contempler': women's sculpture for the dead,
Marjan Sterckx; Spectacle, maintenance, and materiality: women and death in
modern Brittany, Maura Coughlin; A conversation with Aunt Carol: the fluid
functionality of funeral programs in African-American culture, Michelle J.
Pinkard; From private places to public spaces: mourning and death in the
art of four 21st-century women, Kathryn Beattie. Part III Bodily Practices:
Reading material culture: British women's position and the death trade in
the long 18th century, Michelle Iwen; Hadley chests: a reflection on the
chaos and sacrifice of childbirth, B.A. Harrington; 'Feel how soft her hair
is': Amish women's practices on the female body, Violet A. Dutcher;
Representing corporeal 'truth' in the work of Anna Morandi Manzolini and
Mada
Contents: Connecting women and death: an introduction, Beth Fowkes Tobin
and Maureen Daly Goggin; Part I Mourning Practices: Widows and courtesans,
'pizzocchere' and nuns: women in mourning in the Venetian Republic,
1400-1800, Isabella Campagnol; Fashioning death/gendering sentiment:
mourning jewelry in Britain in the 18th-century, Arianne Fennetaux;
Emotions and rituals: responses to death among the nobility in modern
France, Elizabeth C. Macknight; Stitching (in) death: 18th- and
19th-century American and English mourning samplers, Maureen Daly Goggin;
'The thing they knew': social exclusion at Southern wakes in Eudora Welty's
The Wanderers and The Optimist's Daughter, Laura Patterson; 'Confessional'
poetry and the material culture of death, Gillian D. Steinberg. Part II
Memorializing: Columbia mourns: the distaff side of Washington's long
farewell, Meredith Eliassen; More than 'a heap of dust': the material
memorialization of three 19th-century women's graves, Elizabethada A.
Wright; Domesticating death in the sentimental republic: commemorating and
mourning in US civil war nurses' memoirs, Ashley Byock; 'Une fleur que ses
yeux éteints ne peuvent plus contempler': women's sculpture for the dead,
Marjan Sterckx; Spectacle, maintenance, and materiality: women and death in
modern Brittany, Maura Coughlin; A conversation with Aunt Carol: the fluid
functionality of funeral programs in African-American culture, Michelle J.
Pinkard; From private places to public spaces: mourning and death in the
art of four 21st-century women, Kathryn Beattie. Part III Bodily Practices:
Reading material culture: British women's position and the death trade in
the long 18th century, Michelle Iwen; Hadley chests: a reflection on the
chaos and sacrifice of childbirth, B.A. Harrington; 'Feel how soft her hair
is': Amish women's practices on the female body, Violet A. Dutcher;
Representing corporeal 'truth' in the work of Anna Morandi Manzolini and
Mada
and Maureen Daly Goggin; Part I Mourning Practices: Widows and courtesans,
'pizzocchere' and nuns: women in mourning in the Venetian Republic,
1400-1800, Isabella Campagnol; Fashioning death/gendering sentiment:
mourning jewelry in Britain in the 18th-century, Arianne Fennetaux;
Emotions and rituals: responses to death among the nobility in modern
France, Elizabeth C. Macknight; Stitching (in) death: 18th- and
19th-century American and English mourning samplers, Maureen Daly Goggin;
'The thing they knew': social exclusion at Southern wakes in Eudora Welty's
The Wanderers and The Optimist's Daughter, Laura Patterson; 'Confessional'
poetry and the material culture of death, Gillian D. Steinberg. Part II
Memorializing: Columbia mourns: the distaff side of Washington's long
farewell, Meredith Eliassen; More than 'a heap of dust': the material
memorialization of three 19th-century women's graves, Elizabethada A.
Wright; Domesticating death in the sentimental republic: commemorating and
mourning in US civil war nurses' memoirs, Ashley Byock; 'Une fleur que ses
yeux éteints ne peuvent plus contempler': women's sculpture for the dead,
Marjan Sterckx; Spectacle, maintenance, and materiality: women and death in
modern Brittany, Maura Coughlin; A conversation with Aunt Carol: the fluid
functionality of funeral programs in African-American culture, Michelle J.
Pinkard; From private places to public spaces: mourning and death in the
art of four 21st-century women, Kathryn Beattie. Part III Bodily Practices:
Reading material culture: British women's position and the death trade in
the long 18th century, Michelle Iwen; Hadley chests: a reflection on the
chaos and sacrifice of childbirth, B.A. Harrington; 'Feel how soft her hair
is': Amish women's practices on the female body, Violet A. Dutcher;
Representing corporeal 'truth' in the work of Anna Morandi Manzolini and
Mada