Winner of the Abbott Lowell Cummings Prize from the Vernacular Architecture Forum, 1987. and Winner, Alice Davis Hitchcock Award, Society of Architectural Historians.
Holy Things and Profane is an innovative study of the relationship between artifacts and society. It examines the symbolism and ideology of the Anglican churches of colonial Virginia, focusing not only on the buildings but on their surviving fittings and furnishings - silver, furniture, books, decorative arts - and on the social and religious rituals that they framed. By setting these in the context of the public and domestic landscapes, Dell Upton creates a comprehensive portrait of colonial Virginia's artifactual world that will serve as a model for future studies of architecture and material culture.
Upton points out that in the first part of the eighteenth century the Anglican church in Virginia was dominated by an authoritarian gentry. Using the parish as a revealing microcosm of a particular world, he demonstrates how Virginia's ruling elite used the "holy" church to buttress their own "profane' power. Their methods included the modeling of church decorations and furnishings on the artifacts of the great plantation houses to reinforce the visual imagery of the colony's social hierarchy.
Even before the revolution, Upton notes, there was widespread dissatisfaction with the social hierarchy implied by the church, and by the end of the century the gentry either relinguished such claims or witnessed the collapse of their parishes. In this masterful and fully illustrated study, he shows the Virginia parish to have been a central institution of the colony's life, inextricably bound to its social, political, and economic dynamics.
Dell Upton is Assistant Professor of Architectural History at the University of California, Berkeley. An Architectural History Foundation Book.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Upton interweaves architectural and cultural history to create a vivid new picture of colonial Virginia. Lavishly illustrated, this book examines the architecture, decoration, and furniture of Virginia's Anglican churches as expressions of eighteenth-century life and society.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good +. 1st. 278pp. including index; HB white w/gilt; slight rub w/clean, tight pgs.-remainder mark. DJ browns w/white-photocover; slight rub w/light wear; spine sunned. " .the author uses the Anglican church as a means of portraying life in England's largest and most prosperous mainland American colony." (Virginia) illus. isbn 0262210088 (2). Seller Inventory # 061245
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Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. MIT Press / Architectural History Foundation hardcover in dust jacket, 1986- first edition/1st printing; clean/tight; No marks/tears, minimal wear; (Near Fine/Near Fine). We will add a custom fitted mylar cover, bubble wrap the book and ship it in a New BOX- Not a plastic bag like the zombie sellers. Seller Inventory # B596