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The Commerce of Vision: Optical Culture and Perception in Antebellum America (Early American Studies)
Full title: | The Commerce of Vision: Optical Culture and Perception in Antebellum America (Early American Studies) |
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ISBN: | 9780812250428 |
ISBN 10: | 0812250427 |
Authors: | Brownlee, Peter John |
Publisher: | University of Pennsylvania Press |
Num. pages: | 264 |
Binding: | Hardcover |
Language: | en |
Published on: | 2018 |
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Synopsis
When Ralph Waldo Emerson Wrote In 1837 That Our Age Is Ocular, He Offered A Succinct Assessment Of Antebellum America's Cultural, Commercial, And Physiological Preoccupation With Sight. In The Early Nineteenth Century, The American City's Visual Culture Was Manifest In Pamphlets, Newspapers, Painting Exhibitions, And Spectacular Entertainments; Businesses Promoted Their Wares To Consumers On The Move With Broadsides, Posters, And Signboards; And Advances In Ophthalmological Sciences Linked The Mechanics Of Vision To The Physiological Functions Of The Human Body. Within This Crowded Visual Field, Sight Circulated As A Metaphor, As A Physiological Process, And As A Commercial Commodity. Out Of The Intersection Of These Various Discourses And Practices Emerged An Entirely New Understanding Of Vision. The Commerce Of Vision Integrates Cultural History, Art History, And Material Culture Studies To Explore How Vision Was Understood And Experienced In The First Half Of The Nineteenth Century. Peter John Brownlee. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.