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Black : The History of a Color / Michel Pastoureau.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook-Package Backlist 2000-2013 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Pastoureau, Michel, 1947- author.
Standardized Title:
Noir. English
Language:
English
French
Subjects (All):
Black.
Color--Psychological aspects--History.
Color.
Color--Social aspects--History.
Symbolism of colors--History.
Symbolism of colors.
Black in art.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (218 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, [2009]
Language Note:
Translated from the French, Noir.
Summary:
Black, favorite color of priests and penitents, artists and ascetics, fashion designers and fascists, has always stood for powerfully opposed ideas: authority and humility, sin and holiness, rebellion and conformity, wealth and poverty, good and bad. In this book, the author of Blue now tells the fascinating social history of the color black in Europe. In the beginning was black, he tells us. The archetypal color of darkness and death, black was associated in the early Christian period with hell and the devil but also with monastic virtue. In the medieval era, black became the habit of courtiers and a hallmark of royal luxury. Black took on new meanings for early modern Europeans as they began to print words and images in black and white, and to absorb Isaac Newton's announcement that black was no color after all. During the romantic period, black was melancholy's friend, while in the twentieth century black (and white) came to dominate art, print, photography, and film, and was finally restored to the status of a true color. For the author, the history of any color must be a social history first because it is societies that give colors everything from their changing names to their changing meanings, and black is exemplary in this regard. In dyes, fabrics, and clothing, and in painting and other art works, black has always been a forceful and ambivalent shaper of social, symbolic, and ideological meaning in European societies.
Contents:
In the beginning was black : from the beginning to the year 1000
Mythologies of darkness
From darkness to colors
From palette to lexicon
Death and its color
The black bird
Black, white, red
In the devil's palette : tenth to thirteenth centuries
The devil and his images
The devil and his colors
A disturbing bestiary
To dispel the darkness
The monk's quarrel: white versus black
A new color order: the coat of arms
Who was the black knight?
A fashionable color : Fourteenth to sixteenth centuries
The colors of the skin
The Christianization of dark skin
Jesus with the dyer
Dyeing in black
The color's moral code
The luxury of princes
The gray of hope
The birth of the world in black and white : sixteenth to eighteenth centuries
Ink and paper
Color in black and white
Hachures and guillochures
The color war
The Protestant dress code
A very somber century
The return of the devil
New speculations, new classifications
A new order of colors
All the colors of black : eighteenth to twenty-first centuries
The triumph of color
The age of enlightenment
The poetics of melancholy
The age of coal and factories
Regarding images
A modern color
A dangerous color?
Notes:
Independent Publisher Book Awards ( IPPYs ) (nominated), 2009
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
0-691-97886-7

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