Feeling Things Objects and Emotions Through History

Feeling Things: Objects and Emotions Through History by Stephanie Downes, published by Oxford University Press in 2018, is an interdisciplinary essay collection comprising 255 pages. This work investigates the interactions between people, feelings, and objects in premodern Europe, particularly during a time when mass production was absent and material communication was paramount. The book addresses the historical intersections of materiality and emotions, emphasizing the need for a cross-disciplinary theoretical framework to analyze how objects have emotional significance across different cultural and geographical contexts.
Readers will find contributions from an international group of historians, art historians, curators, and literary scholars, exploring a diverse range of cultural, literary, visual, and material sources. The essays consider various objects, including books, letters, and religious relics, and examine how emotions like despair, hope, and love are inscribed in these items, creating what are termed ’emotional objects.’ This collection highlights the significance and agency of objects in shaping individual relationships and cultural identities, offering insights into the evolving emotional valencies of material culture throughout history.
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This interdisciplinary essay collection investigates the various interactions of people, feelings, and things throughout premodern Europe. It focuses on the period before mass production, when limited literacy often prioritised material methods of communication. The subject of materiality has been of increasing significance in recent historical inquiry, alongside growing emphasis on the relationships between objects, emotions, and affect in archaeological and sociological research. The historical intersections between materiality and emotions, however, have remained under-theorised, particularly with respect to artefacts that have continuing resonance over extended periods of time or across cultural and geographical space. Feeling Things addresses the need to develop an appropriate cross-disciplinary theoretical framework for the analysis of objects and emotions in European history, with special attention to the need to track the shifting emotional valencies of objects from the past to the present, and from one place and cultural context to another.
The collection draws together an international group of historians, art historians, curators, and literary scholars working on a variety of cultural, literary, visual, and material sources. Objects considered include books, letters, prosthetics, religious relics, shoes, stone, and textiles. Many of these have been preserved in international galleries, museums, and archives, while others have remained in their original locations, even as their contexts have changed over time. The chapters consider the ways in which emotions such as despair, fear, grief, hope, love, and wonder become inscribed in and ascribed to these items, producing ’emotional objects’ of significance and agency. Such objects can be harnessed to create, affirm, or express individual relationships, as, for example, in religious devotion and practice, or in the construction of cultural, communal, and national identities.
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