Napoleonic Objects and their Afterlives

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'The Little Corporal'
1890 Waterloo Panorama
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art
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B01=Matilda Greig
B01=Nicole Cochrane
Canova
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=ABA
Category=ACV
Category=AFT
Category=AGA
Category=HBA
Category=HBWH
Category=JBCC
cinema
COP=United Kingdom
cultural memory
Dame Mabel Brookes
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Dublin
ephemera
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fontainebleau
global trade
Language_English
material culture
memorabilia
Napoleon Bonaparte
Napoleonic Era
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Price_€50 to €100
PS=Forthcoming
relics
Ridley Scott
softlaunch
St Helena
Stanley Kubrick
theatre
visual culture
Vivant Denon

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350415072
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 238mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Feb 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Two centuries after Napoleon Bonaparte’s death, this edited volume brings together a diverse group of historians, art historians, and museum professionals to critically examine the enduring power of visual and material culture in the making of Napoleonic memory. While most discussions surrounding the legendary figure explore his impact on legislative, political, or military reform, this innovative volume explores the global dimensions of the trade in Napoleonic collectibles, art, and relics over time.

Representing new avenues of research and scholarship, Napoleonic Objects and their Afterlives investigates the material objects and cultural forms that Napoleon inspired through a range of themes. These include art collecting, the circulation and display of objects, political and imperial symbolism, and the flexibility and ambiguity of Napoleon’s enduring legacy. The essays examine how and why, despite his contentious role in contemporary memory, Napoleon continues to escape much historical and popular censure. They explore the ways people have connected with the idea of him: on stage and screen; in museums and galleries; and most intimately of all, by gathering items said to have belonged to him, right down to his toothbrush and locks of his hair.

Napoleonic items can be official or personal, serious or comical, luxury or disposable, yet little work has been done to bring together these diverse cultural histories into conversation with one another. With its broad, multi-disciplinary approach, including perspectives from art history, film studies, cultural history, and museum curation, the book provides a deep critical insight into the cult of personality surrounding Napoleon and its effect on our understanding of celebrity culture today and in the future.

Includes an additional foreword by Napoleon’s biographer, Ruth Scurr, author of In Gardens and Shadows (2021).

Matilda Greig is a Historian at the National Army Museum in London, specialising in the cultural history of warfare in the 19th century.

Nicole Cochrane is an art historian and curator. She is currently Assistant Curator in Historic British Art (1790-1850) at Tate Britain, UK.