Transparent Things: A Cabinet
- Edited by Maggie M. Williams, Karen Eileen Overbey
Published on March 28, 2013 by punctum books
- Pages
- 88 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 5⤫8 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-0-615-79037-4 (Paperback)
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: HIS037010
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: 3KL, AGA, DNL
Inspired by a passage in Vladmir Nabokov’s Transparent Things (1972), and also compiled as a future love letter to The Material Collective(opens in new tab), the essays collected here play with the transparency of pedagogy, scholarship, and writing, as well as with objects that can be seen through, such as crystals and stained glass. As Nabokov wrote,
For the art and literary historians gathered together in this volume (Angela Bennett Segler, Jennifer Borland, Karen Eileen Overbey, Nancy Thompson, and Maggie M. Williams), all students of medieval material, these tensions between surface and depth, present and past, concentration and skimming are all too familiar. The inherent contradictions of medieval objects, their irreducibility to either the purely intellectual or the merely physical, are at once the delights and the dangers of the art historian’s work. This book thus offers a dialogue on the question of how our encounters with physical things spark a process and how objects might allow unique collisions between the past and the present, the human and the inanimate, the practice of history and lived experience. As works of medieval studies or art history, these essays are incomplete, awkward, and provisional. Some of them may even read like embarrassing teenage poetry. This collection is like that dusty box in the basement: it is full of raw, unedited, transparent expressions of affect, of the sort we have learned to hide.
Contents
Frontmatter (i–xv)
Introduction: Dear Material Collective (i–iv)
Maggie M. Williams, Karen Eileen Overbey
Reflections on the Surface, or, Notes for a Tantric Art History (1–15)
Karen Eileen Overbey
Encountering the Inauthentic (17–38)
Jennifer Borland
Touched for the Very First Time: Losing My Manuscript Virginity (39–55)
Angie Bennett Segler
Close Encounters with Luminous Objects: Reflections on Studying Stained Glass (57–67)
Nancy Thompson
Biographies
Usage metrics
Genres
- Art+Aesthetics
- Premodern
Keywords
- art history
- art theory
- book history
- medieval architecture
- objects
