ABSTRACT

Everyday Political Objects examines a series of historical case studies across a very broad timescale, using objects as a means to develop different approaches to understanding politics where both internal and external definitions of the political prove inadequate.

Materiality and objects have gradually made their way into the historian’s toolbox in recent years, but the distinctive contribution that a set of methods developed for the study of objects can make to our understanding of politics has yet to be explored. This book shows how everyday objects play a certain role in politics, which is specific to material things. It provides case studies which re-orientate the view of the political in a way that is distinct from, but complementary to, the study of political institutions, the social history of politics and the analysis of discourse. Each chapter shows, in a distinctive and innovative way, how historians might change their approach to politics by incorporating objects into their methodology.

Analysing case studies from France, the Congo, Burkina Faso, Romania and Britain between the early Middle Ages and the present day makes this study the perfect tool for students and scholars in the disciplines of history, art history, political science, anthropology and archaeology.

 

Chapter 7 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003147428

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Useful things

chapter 2|17 pages

Rings of power

The interpretation of early medieval objects of adornment

chapter 3|18 pages

The practical and symbolic uses of the medieval horn

From power object to common instrument

chapter 4|14 pages

A history of domestic disorder

The French royal household in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries

chapter 5|19 pages

The prince and his coffer

The material functions and symbolic power of an everyday political object at the end of the Middle Ages

chapter 6|23 pages

Teapots, fans and snuffboxes

The portable politics of gender and empire in eighteenth-century Britain

chapter 7|16 pages

Wooden shoes and Wellington boots

The politics of footwear in Georgian Britain

chapter 8|15 pages

The fan during the French Revolution

From the elite to the people

chapter 10|19 pages

A sonorous politics of everyday objects

Coal workers' charivaris during the Anzin strike of 1884

chapter 11|39 pages

Political fashion

Elegance as subversion in the Congos of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries 1

chapter 12|10 pages

‘Citizen Browning’

The banality of a revolutionary object, c.1905–c.1912

chapter 13|18 pages

Bringing audible propaganda into the everyday

The politicization of the phonograph record from its origins to the SERP, 1888–2000

chapter 14|19 pages

Image, voice and voivodes

Communist diafilm in Romania (1950–1989)

chapter 15|18 pages

The trajectory of a spear

The materiality of an everyday political object 1