Conjuring the real : the role of architecture in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century fiction

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Conjuring the real : the role of architecture in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century fiction

edited by Rumiko Handa and James Potter ; foreword by Iain Borden

University of Nebraska Press, c2011

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Contents of Works

  • "All that life can afford"? : perspectives on the screening of historic literary London / Ian Christie
  • Architecture in historical fiction : a historical and comparative study / Michael Alexander
  • Norman Abbey as romantic mise-en-scène : St. Georges de Boscherville in historical representation / Stephen Bann
  • Performing history on the Victorian stage / Richard Schoch
  • Shops and subjects / Andrew Ballantyne
  • Pride and prejudice : establishing historical connections among the arts / Josh Silvers and Toby D. Olsen

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the Western world the period from the mid-eighteenth through the nineteenth century was a time of expanding historical consciousness, a period that saw the birth of modern historiography, a profusion of historical novels and paintings, and the widespread production of historical plays. Historical buildings, in themselves already of intense interest to people of the day, also found their way into the multiplying cultural forms as concrete presences anchoring a novelist's, poet's, painter's, or, eventually, filmmaker's vision of the past. In recent years a number of blockbuster films have used historically significant buildings as filming locations because buildings can concretely bring a former era or fictional world closer to contemporary viewers. Conjuring the Real traces the genealogy of this representational role of architecture, going back through the history of film and then further in literature, art, and theater. The contributors examine the ways in which authors, artists, and stage managers used complex depictions of buildings to feed and shape the audience's historical imagination. How can we understand the significance of architecture, not through its original design and construction but through the ways in which the public experiences, perceives, and understands it? The contributors pursue this question through the ideas of secondary portrayers of historical buildings, such as writers and artists, and then through the responses of those who read and view these creations.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations Foreword Iain Borden Introduction Rumiko Handa 1. "All That Life Can Afford"? Perspectives on the Screening of Historic Literary London Ian Christie 2. Architecture in Historical Fiction: A Historical and Comparative Study Michael Alexander 3. Norman Abbey as Romantic Mise-en-Scene: St. Georges de Boscherville in Historical Representation Stephen Bann 4. Performing History on the Victorian Stage Richard Schoch 5. Shops and Subjects Andrew Ballantyne 6. Pride and Prejudice: Establishing Historical Connections among the Arts Josh Silvers and Toby D. Olsen Contributors

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