ABSTRACT

This book reveals a new history of the imagination told through its engagement with the body. Even as they denounced the imagination’s potential for inviting luxury, vice, and corruption, American audiences avidly consumed a transatlantic visual culture of touring paintings, dioramas, gift books, and theatrical performances that pictured a preindustrial—and largely imaginary—European past. By examining the visual, material, and rhetorical strategies artists like Washington Allston, Asher B. Durand, Thomas Cole, and others used to navigate this treacherous ground, Catherine Holochwost uncovers a hidden tension in antebellum aesthetics. The book will be of interest to scholars of art history, literary and cultural history, critical race studies, performance studies, and media studies.

chapter 1|38 pages

Historicizing the Imagination

chapter 2|35 pages

A Representation So Completely Ad Vivim

chapter 3|38 pages

Staying on the Surface

chapter 4|26 pages

Race-ing the Embodied Imagination

chapter 5|47 pages

Culturing the Embodied Imagination