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Name Academic Seminar
Start 2012/05/14 at 04:30:00 PM
End NONE SPECIFIED
Description (old) Yvette Piggush, Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University and AAS-NEH Long-term Fellow
Shop Windows and the Exhibitionary Complex in Antebellum America

Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories of all things guilty, gothic, and Puritan are well known and easily linked to his fondness for museums. His writings about the related experience of shop window displays, in contrast, have received little attention. Using images of shops and Hawthorne’s discussions of windows in his novel The House of Seven Gables (1851) and in his short story “Little Annie’s Ramble” (1835), this presentation expands our knowledge of commercial exhibitions and their reception in the antebellum period. While some saw shop displays in terms of class—as opportunities for free education or for theft—Hawthorne looked at them for an alternative to the gendered hierarchies of the museum.

Description (new) Yvette Piggush, Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University and AAS-NEH Long-term Fellow
Shop Windows and the Exhibitionary Complex in Antebellum America

Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories of all things guilty, gothic, and Puritan are well known and easily linked to his fondness for museums. His writings about the related experience of shop window displays, in contrast, have received little attention. Using images of shops and Hawthorne’s discussions of windows in his novel The House of Seven Gables (1851) and in his short story “Little Annie’s Ramble” (1835), this presentation expands our knowledge of commercial exhibitions and their reception in the antebellum period. While some saw shop displays in terms of class—as opportunities for free education or for theft—Hawthorne looked at them for an alternative to the gendered hierarchies of the museum.

\n\nContact: Paul Erickson : (508) 471-2158 : perickson@mwa.org

Location Elmarion Room, Goddard-Daniels House, 190 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA
DateTime Stamp 2013/05/24 at 06:51:11 PM
UID 20130524T225111Z@eventkeeper.com


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OLD
BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:1.0
PRODID:EventKeeper 4.4.0
BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Academic Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Yvette Piggush, Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University and AAS-NEH Long-term Fellow
Shop Windows and the Exhibitionary Complex in Antebellum America

Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories of all things guilty, gothic, and Puritan are well known and easily linked to his fondness for museums. His writings about the related experience of shop window displays, in contrast, have received little attention. Using images of shops and Hawthorne’s discussions of windows in his novel The House of Seven Gables (1851) and in his short story “Little Annie’s Ramble” (1835), this presentation expands our knowledge of commercial exhibitions and their reception in the antebellum period. While some saw shop displays in terms of class—as opportunities for free education or for theft—Hawthorne looked at them for an alternative to the gendered hierarchies of the museum.

[AAS]
DTSTART:20120514T203000Z
DTEND
LOCATION:Elmarion Room, Goddard-Daniels House, 190 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR



NEW
BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:EventKeeper 7.6.x
UID:20130524T225111Z@eventkeeper.com
BEGIN:VEVENT
SUMMARY:Academic Seminar
DESCRIPTION:Yvette Piggush, Assistant Professor of English at Florida International University and AAS-NEH Long-term Fellow
Shop Windows and the Exhibitionary Complex in Antebellum America

Nathaniel Hawthorne’s stories of all things guilty, gothic, and Puritan are well known and easily linked to his fondness for museums. His writings about the related experience of shop window displays, in contrast, have received little attention. Using images of shops and Hawthorne’s discussions of windows in his novel The House of Seven Gables (1851) and in his short story “Little Annie’s Ramble” (1835), this presentation expands our knowledge of commercial exhibitions and their reception in the antebellum period. While some saw shop displays in terms of class—as opportunities for free education or for theft—Hawthorne looked at them for an alternative to the gendered hierarchies of the museum.

\n\nContact: Paul Erickson : (508) 471-2158 : perickson@mwa.org [AAS]
DTSTAMP20130524T225111Z
DTSTART:20120514T203000Z
DTEND
LOCATION:Elmarion Room, Goddard-Daniels House, 190 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR