Thesis ID: CBB001561338

Reading Glasses: American Spectacles in the Age of Franklin (2007)

unapi

Stebbins McCaffrey, Katherine (Author)


Boston University
Sewell, Jessica


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: Advisor: Sewell, Jessica
Physical Details: 425 pp.
Language: English

Reading Glasses argues that spectacles played a critical role in shaping ideas about vision in the American colonies over the course of the eighteenth century. Chapter Two explores the tension between changing expectations for visual aids in seventeenth-century England and the attitudes of Puritans who owned some of the few spectacles available in the early colonies. Chapters Three and Four trace the emergence of a new style, called temple spectacles, made after the 1720s and sold in the colonies by the 1740s, which allowed wearers--both the seriously afflicted and the merely curious--to try on an Enlightenment perspective. This perspective, the makers argued, simulated the privacy, interiority, and security of viewpoint that inhered in the camera obscura while freeing the hands to assist the eyes in collecting and documenting information. Drawing on probate inventories, account books, advertisements, correspondence, literature, medical and philosophical treatises, paintings, and engravings, and organized around the timeline suggested by extant artifacts, Reading Glasses documents how American colonists bought temple spectacles, as technologically restyled and materially refined by the English spectacle guild, to express and enable their devotion to reading, writing, account and other record keeping. Both practically and metaphorically, these spectacles helped to shape understandings of what it meant to be a spectator/speculator in a bourgeois public sphere, and reoriented the body in relation to pages and persons alike. Chapter Five explores how this new awareness of binocularity informed the texts and visions that constituted a functional body politic and a healthy nation in the emerging United States. At the same time that observers became accustomed to a relatively powerful, individuated sense of sight by spectacle frames, they were challenged by conventions in the use of lenses to think about the coordination of their eyes. Reading Glasses demonstrates that temple spectacles formed a tangible link between Enlightenment understandings of vision and the binocular, bounded, embodied concept of vision symbolized by the stereoscope and other nineteenth century visual technologies.

...More

Description Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 68/08 (2008). Pub. no. AAT 3279965.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001561338/

Similar Citations

Book Gemma Almond-Brown; (2023)
Spectacles and the Victorians: Measuring, defining and shaping visual capacity (/isis/citation/CBB163836400/)

Book Meacham, Sarah Hand; (2009)
Every Home a Distillery: Alcohol, Gender, and Technology in the Colonial Chesapeake (/isis/citation/CBB001020416/)

Book Paulett, Robert; (2012)
An Empire of Small Places: Mapping the Southeastern Anglo-Indian Trade, 1732--1795 (/isis/citation/CBB001212704/)

Book Silva, Cristobal; (2011)
Miraculous Plagues: An Epidemiology of Early New England Narrative (/isis/citation/CBB001250139/)

Article Johnson, Christopher; (2004)
“Periwigged Heralds”: Epistemology and Intertextuality in Early American Cometography (/isis/citation/CBB000500189/)

Book Heather Law Pezzarossi; Sheptak, Russell N.; (2019)
Indigenous persistence in the colonized Americas: material and documentary perspectives on entanglement (/isis/citation/CBB197302697/)

Thesis Wisecup, Kelly; (2009)
Communicating Disease: Medical Knowledge and Literary Forms in Colonial British America (/isis/citation/CBB001560648/)

Chapter Murrin, John M.; (2002)
“Things Fearful to Name”: Bestiality in Early America (/isis/citation/CBB000359576/)

Book Tannenbaum, Rebecca J.; (2002)
The Healer's Calling: Women and Medicine in Early New England (/isis/citation/CBB000201563/)

Book Drake, James David; (2011)
The Nation's Nature: How Continental Presumptions Gave Rise to the United States of America (/isis/citation/CBB001252757/)

Book Brückner, Martin; (2006)
The Geographic Revolution in Early America: Maps, Literacy, and National Identity (/isis/citation/CBB000651412/)

Book Jennifer Van Horn; (2017)
The Power of Objects in Eighteenth-Century British America (/isis/citation/CBB640766925/)

Article Christopher, Milbourne; (2005)
Magic in Early Baltimore (/isis/citation/CBB000660305/)

Book Gronim, Sara Stidstone; (2007)
Everyday Nature: Knowledge of the Natural World in Colonial New York (/isis/citation/CBB000773754/)

Authors & Contributors
Heather Law Pezzarossi
Sheptak, Russell N.
Horn, Jennifer Van
Gemma Almond-Brown
Wisecup, Kelly
Tannenbaum, Rebecca J.
Concepts
Great Britain, colonies
Technology
Trade
Science and society
American Indians; Native Americans; First Nations of the Americas
Geography
Time Periods
18th century
17th century
19th century
16th century
Places
North America
United States
Detroit (Michigan)
Baltimore (Maryland, U.S.)
Atlantic Ocean
Chesapeake Bay (North America)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment