Victorian Prism:
Refractions of the Crystal Palace |
| |
| James Buzard, Joseph W. Childers, and Eileen Gillooly, eds. |
| 352 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 31 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2603-2 $45.00 |
| Victorian
Literature and Culture Series |
| Available June 2007 |
 |
From the moment it opened on the first of May in the Crystal Palace
in Hyde Park, London, the Great Exhibition of 1851 was one of
the defining events of the Victorian period. It stood not only
as a visible symbol of British industrial and technological progress
but as a figure for modernity—a figure that has often been
thought to convey one coherent message and vision of culture and
society.
This volume examines the place occupied both materially and discursively
by the Crystal Palace and other nineteenth- and twentieth-century
exhibitions in the struggle to understand what it means to be
modern. Initiated in part by a number of conferences held in 2001
to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Crystal Palace, Victorian
Prism provides new perspectives to historians, literary critics,
art historians, and others interested in how a large glass building
in a London park could refract meaning from Caracas to Calcutta.
In its investigations of the ways of knowing and shaping the
world that emerged during the planning and execution of this first
"world's fair," Victorian Prism not only restores
the multiplicity of experiences and other determining factors
to our picture of the Great Exhibition; it makes reevaluation
of the exhibition and its legacies the occasion for reevaluating
modernity itself in its broadest sense—as the cultures,
potentialities, and liabilities of the Enlightenment.
With essays by a number of leading scholars in their fields,
the collection as a whole focuses on how these exhibitions, in
attempting to define the cultures of their day, incorporated a
range of conflicting ideologies and agendas. In doing so, it offers
a richer, more complex understanding of the experience of modernity
than we have previously acknowledged. The volume also addresses
the ways in which the cultural processes and tendencies brought
together in these exhibitions have been refracted down to the
present, thus informing and complicating our own relationship
to both modernity and postmodernity.
James Buzard is Professor of Literature
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Joseph W.
Childers is Professor of English at the University of California,
Riverside. Eileen Gillooly is Associate Director
of the Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University and
a member of the Department of English.