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Darkness

A Cultural History

Nina Edwards

$42.99

Hardback

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English
Reaktion Books
01 November 2018
Darkness divides opinion. Some are frightened of the dark, or at least prefer to avoid it, and there are many who dislike what it appears to stand for. Others are drawn to its strange domain, delighting in its uncertainties, lured by all the associations of folklore and legend, by the call of the mysterious and of the unknown. The history of attitudes to what we cannot quite make out, in all its physical and metaphorical manifestations, challenges the notion that the world is possible to fully comprehend. 

Nina Edwards explores darkness as both physical feature and cultural image, through themes of sight, blindness, consciousness, dreams, fear of the dark, night blindness, and the in-between states of dusk or fog, twilight and dawn, the point or period of obscuration and clarification. Taking readers through different historical periods, she interrogates humanity's various attempts to harness and suppress the dark, from our early use of fire to the later discovery of electricity. She reveals how the idea of darkness pervades art, literature, religion and every aspect of our everyday language. 

Darkness: A Cultural History shows us how darkness has fed our imagination. Whether a shifting concept or real physical presence, it always conveys complex meaning.
By:  
Imprint:   Reaktion Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 138mm, 
ISBN:   9781780239828
ISBN 10:   1780239823
Pages:   288
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Nina Edwards is a freelance writer and the author of On the Button: The Significance of an Ordinary Item (2011), Weeds (Reaktion, 2015), Offal: A Global History (Reaktion, 2013) and Dressed for War: Uniform, Civilian Clothing and Trappings, 1914-1918 (2014). She lives in London.

Reviews for Darkness: A Cultural History

Edwards, who has previously submitted weeds, buttons, and offal to this [cultural history] process, brings a huge range of knowledge, enthusiasm, and sensitivity to the subject. . . . Edwards presents herself openly as an advocate of the dark 'taking its part against the tide of opinion that promotes the light, ' but she maintains, sometimes very deftly, a balance and a breadth that are refreshing. --Sara Maitland Tablet A philosophical undercurrent runs through Edwards's introduction to this compendious survey of darkness, but the scope and energy are what immediately impress. . . . The book is very well written, reminiscent of the work of Alexandra Harris and recognizably a descendant of Sir James Frazer. . . . No kind of darkness is excluded from this cultural history--interior, exterior, metaphorical, racial, psychological, even abstract (black humor)--and, inevitably, there is much that is fascinating. . . . There is no denying the thoroughness of the author's researches or her gift for lively--dare one say illuminating--synthesis. --Country Life So many dark matters are brought to light in Edwards's study. . . . Edwards writes with flair about art's capacity for capturing the contrariness of the dark. She links the chiaroscuro of Caravaggio or Rembrandt to the kind of heightened tension generated by film noir. . . . Edwards's prose is melodic and erudite. --Times Literary Supplement As subjects go, darkness would seem a little slippery, but in Darkness: A Cultural History, English historian Edwards, a specialist in poetic analyses of the commonplace (the significance of buttons, the history of offal, and so on), grasps it with a sure and practiced mind, sifting through perceptions for an array of definitions that boil down to one idea: possibility. . . . To Edwards, darkness is a thing of richness, universally accessible and transformative, and her passion for the intimacy it allows--a passion buoyed by fluent prose and deep research--expands our understanding, not only of her subject but of its role in our hearts and history. --Australian It is apt that such a mesmerizing image should accompany the opening chapter of Edwards's beguiling book, which gallantly aims to subvert common views of darkness, both physical and metaphorical. . . . For the most part, Edwards's approach is considered and engaging as she explores the curious paradoxes and possibilities of ethereal half-shadows and 'umbral blackness.' . . . Marking Edwards's latest work to embrace the neglected and the obscure (previous offerings include weeds, buttons, and Offal: A Global History), Darkness leaves the reader floating, too--but full of conviction that truth and beauty can still exist, to quote Edward Lear, 'when awful darkness and silence reign.' --Spectator The power of encountering life through a dark or dimly lit lens is very much on trend and Edwards's Darkness: A Cultural History fits right in, offering a broad, sweeping narrative which ventures into the worlds of history, anthropology, and science. . . . It is a beautifully produced work, in hardback, with color plates and illustrations that reflect the importance given by the author to darkness in art and poetry. It is the sort of book that makes you want to hold it, caress the cover, and turn the pages gently. --Methodist Recorder


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