Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Amsterdam University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
6. The Elusiveness of History and the Ephemerality of Display in Nineteenth- Century France and Belgium: At the Intersection of the Built Environment and the Spatial Image in Literature
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Introduction: Staging the Temporary: The Fragile Character of Space 7
-
I The Department Store
- 1. “One Need Be Neither a Shopper Nor a Purchaser to Enjoy:” Ephemeral Exhibitions at Tiffany & Co., 1870–1905 19
- 2. Enclosed Exhibitions : Claustrophobia, Balloons, and the Department Store in Zola’s Au Bonheur des Dames 55
-
II Spectacles
- 3. Jardins-Spectacles: Spaces and Traces of Embodiment 81
- 4. Parading the Temporary: Cosmoramas, Panoramas , and Spectacles in Early Nineteenth-Century Paris 107
- 5. Portable Museums: Imaging and Staging the “Northern Gothic Art Tour” – Ephemera and Alterity 131
-
III At the Intersection of Literature and the Built Environment
- 6. The Elusiveness of History and the Ephemerality of Display in Nineteenth- Century France and Belgium: At the Intersection of the Built Environment and the Spatial Image in Literature 161
- 7. The “Phantasmatic” Chinatown in Helen Hunt Jackson’s “The Chinese Empire” and Mark Twain’s Roughing It 191
-
IV The Museum and Alternative Exhibition Spaces
- 8. “Show Meets Science:” How Hagenbeck’s “Human Zoos” Inspired Ethnographic Science and Its Museum Presentation 221
- 9. The Last Wunderkammer : Curiosities in Private Collections between the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 253
- 10. The Impact of Alternative Exhibition Spaces on European Modern Art before World War I 273
- Index 295
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Introduction: Staging the Temporary: The Fragile Character of Space 7
-
I The Department Store
- 1. “One Need Be Neither a Shopper Nor a Purchaser to Enjoy:” Ephemeral Exhibitions at Tiffany & Co., 1870–1905 19
- 2. Enclosed Exhibitions : Claustrophobia, Balloons, and the Department Store in Zola’s Au Bonheur des Dames 55
-
II Spectacles
- 3. Jardins-Spectacles: Spaces and Traces of Embodiment 81
- 4. Parading the Temporary: Cosmoramas, Panoramas , and Spectacles in Early Nineteenth-Century Paris 107
- 5. Portable Museums: Imaging and Staging the “Northern Gothic Art Tour” – Ephemera and Alterity 131
-
III At the Intersection of Literature and the Built Environment
- 6. The Elusiveness of History and the Ephemerality of Display in Nineteenth- Century France and Belgium: At the Intersection of the Built Environment and the Spatial Image in Literature 161
- 7. The “Phantasmatic” Chinatown in Helen Hunt Jackson’s “The Chinese Empire” and Mark Twain’s Roughing It 191
-
IV The Museum and Alternative Exhibition Spaces
- 8. “Show Meets Science:” How Hagenbeck’s “Human Zoos” Inspired Ethnographic Science and Its Museum Presentation 221
- 9. The Last Wunderkammer : Curiosities in Private Collections between the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries 253
- 10. The Impact of Alternative Exhibition Spaces on European Modern Art before World War I 273
- Index 295