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portada Victorian Jewelry, Identity, and the Novel: Prisms of Culture
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Language
English
Pages
182
Format
Paperback
ISBN13
9781138268500
Edition No.
1

Victorian Jewelry, Identity, and the Novel: Prisms of Culture

Arnold Jean (Author) · Routledge · Paperback

Victorian Jewelry, Identity, and the Novel: Prisms of Culture - Arnold Jean

Physical Book

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Synopsis "Victorian Jewelry, Identity, and the Novel: Prisms of Culture"

In this study of Victorian jewels and their representation, Jean Arnold explores the role material objects play in the cultural cohesion of the West. Diamonds and other gems, Arnold argues, symbolized the most closely held beliefs of the Victorians and thus can be considered "prisms of culture." Mined in the far reaches of the empire, they traversed geographical space and cultural boundaries, representing monetary value and evoking empire, class lineage, class membership, gender relations, and aesthetics. Arnold analyzes the many roles material objects fill in Western culture and surveys the cross-cultural history of the Victorian diamond, uncovering how this object became both preeminent and representative of Victorian values. Her close readings of Wilkie Collins's The Moonstone, George Eliot's Middlemarch, William Makepeace Thackeray's The Great Hoggarty Diamond, and Anthony Trollope's The Eustace Diamonds show gendered, aesthetic, economic, fetishistic, colonial, legal, and culturally symbolic interpretations of jewelry as they are enacted through narrative. Taken together, these divergent interpretations offer a holistic view of a material culture's affective attachment to objects. As the assigned meanings of jewels turn them into symbols of power, personal relationships, and valued ideas, human interactions with gems elicit emotional responses that bind the materialist culture together.

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