Ephemeral Bibelots

Regular price €88.99
A01=Brad Evans
aesthetics
American history
American literature
archive
art
Art Nouveau
Author_Brad Evans
avant-garde
Bibelots
Category=DS
Category=DSA
Category=DSBH
decadence
ephemera
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
fads
Gelett Burgess
Henry James
Kate Chopin
Le Chat Noir
literature
little magazines
media
modernism
modernist little magazines
naturalism
networks
obscurity
periodicals
print culture
realism
relational aesthetics
Stephen Crane
twentieth century
vogue
Will Bradley

Product details

  • ISBN 9781421431550
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Restoring proto-modernist little magazines—known as ephemeral bibelots—to the scholarly canon.

Emanating from the cabarets of modernist Paris, a short-lived vogue spread around the world for avant-garde journals known in English as "ephemeral bibelots." For a time, it seemed that all the young bohemians passing through Paris started their own bibelots modeled on Le Chat Noir, the esoteric magazine of the famed Montmartre cabaret. These journals were recognizable for their decadence, campy queerness, astounding art nouveau illustrations, fin-de-siècle color schemes, innovative typefaces, and practiced bohemianism.

In Ephemeral Bibelots, Brad Evans relays the untold story of this late-nineteenth-century craze for bibelots, dusting off a trove of periodicals largely untouched by digitization. In excavating this forgotten archive, Evans calls into question the prehistory of modernist little magazines as well as the history of American art and literature at the turn of the twentieth century. Considering how artistic movements take shape, move, and disappear, the book is organized around three major themes—"vogue," "ephemera," and "obscurity"—with authors and artists to match. A full-color insert reveals a glorious array of bibelot covers.

This revisionary history of print culture incorporates discussions of pragmatist philosophy and relational aesthetics; women writers like Juliet Wilbor Tompkins and Carolyn Wells; the graphic artists Will Bradley, Louis Rhead, and John Sloan; the dancer Loie Fuller; and twentieth-century figures like H. L. Mencken, Amy Lowell, and Anita Loos. Bringing nineteenth-century American literature and culture into conversation with modern art movements from around the world, Ephemeral Bibelots provides new ways of thinking about the centrality of various media cultures to the attribution of aesthetic innovation and its staying power.

Brad Evans is an associate professor of English at Rutgers University. He is the author of Before Cultures: The Ethnographic Imagination in American Literature, 1865–1920, and the coeditor of Return to the Land of the Head Hunters: Edward S. Curtis, the Kwakwaka'wakw, and the Making of Modern Cinema.