Barbara M. Benedict
Autor de Curiosity: A Cultural History of Early Modern Inquiry
Sobre El Autor
Barbara M. Benedict is the Charles A. Dana Professor of English and chair of the Department of English at Trinity College, Connecticut
Obras de Barbara M. Benedict
Obras relacionadas
Bookish Histories: Books, Literature, and Commercial Modernity, 1700-1900 (2009) — Contribuidor — 15 copias
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Género
- female
Miembros
Reseñas
También Puede Gustarte
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Estadísticas
- Obras
- 2
- También por
- 2
- Miembros
- 39
- Popularidad
- #376,657
- Valoración
- 3.8
- Reseñas
- 1
- ISBNs
- 5
Its forms may change: books collecting oddities obviously only become possible with the development of inexpensive printing and the rise of literacy. Better communication, exploration, and travel made more curiosities available. But was there really any change in people's tendency to be curious? Benedict speaks of curiosities disappearing into private collections, but many of these things were never publicly available until the rise of museums. When did the average person get to see exotic plants, minerals, and artifacts, unless perhaps they were a servant dusting them?
In earlier times, villages, tithings, frankpledges were forms of communal responsibility that must have encouraged a lively interest in the doings of the neighbors, since the collective could be held responsible for individual negligence. Relics added greatly to the attraction of places of worship and pilgrimage, so much to that the houses competed for them, and the church had to limit the "finding" of new relics. Was this entirely for the religious merit, or was it also because the relics were curiosities? Didn't people stare at monstrous births and grisly accidents? I find it hard to believe that gossip and prying about a suspicious pregnancy or neighborly failure or the lives of famous people is not a constant, and Benedict does nothing to establish that it was new in her chosen period. The issues of healthy interest versus prying continue to this day with scandal magazines and tabloids. If one is interested in the particular details of how curiosity manifested itself in this single time period, well here's your book.
I must admit to ignoring a great deal of the theoretical framework.
Another review: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=5731… (más)