Personal Discipline Material: Material Culture
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About the Book
This unique study looks at the role material goods played in shaping our culture. Using archaeological data, probate inventories, and etiquette books, Paul A. Shackel has collected valuable information on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century material items which, when analyzed in historical context, reveals how these items have shaped the development of western culture. Specific examples from the Chesapeake area of Maryland show how individuals and groups responded to social and economic crises by using material goods to define power relations, create social hierarchies, and preserve the social order. Shackel argues that, during the pre-industrial era, society's elite introduced hard-to-find material items, like the fork, with rules of etiquette to maintain social distance and stratification. As the Industrial Revolution made material items cheaper and easier to obtain, the non-elite began to adopt regular usage of particular items as part of standardized behavior while the elite sought to maintain their status with newer and different material goods. Focusing on how the spread of capitalism affected various social groups, Shackel pays specific attention to culture and consumption and symbolic qualities of material culture. His analysis incorporates a review of etiquette literature from the late medieval era to provide a global context for regional behavior and material culture.
Book Details
ISBN-13: 9780870497841
EAN: 9780870497841
Publisher Date: 01 Jul 1993
Binding: HARDCOVER
Continuations: English
Dewey: 975.256
Language: English
MediaMail: Y
PrintOnDemand: N
Spine Width: 20 mm
Width: 171 mm
ISBN-10: 0870497847
Publisher: Univ of Tennessee Pr
Acedemic Level: English
Book Type: English
Depth: 25
Height: 248 mm
LCCN: 92030559
No of Pages: 232
Series Title: English
Sub Title: An Archaeology of Annapolis, Maryland, 1695-1870