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Rebecca F's List: literacy and memory

    • Susan M. Stabile. Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2004. xiii + 284 pp. Figures, notes, and index. $34.95.
    • in 1830, Deborah Norris Logan wistfully remembered her family's house that had stood for nearly seventy years on a street corner in Philadelphia only to be razed and replaced by the Second Bank of the United States. Logan lamented that when the house was destroyed, she lost some of her memories of the house and of her life in it too. She needed the physical structure of the house, its architectural style, the recesses of place and memory hidden in the rooms and spaces she knew so well. This material culture sparked Logan's most intimate and loving memories of the life she lived in the house and among the goods that filled it. More than that, those goods sparked her life remembered, giving meaning to her life as she looked back at it across the plot of land on which her family's house had once stood.

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    • I began to see other ways of 'doing history' – outside of the archive – where meaning is created in the everyday practices of remembering.
    • It became clear to me that cemeteries invoked remembering in two senses.5 The most common and obvious meaning is that they are places of mourning, representing ruptures with the past, yet simultaneously they are places of continuity where the dead are remembered by the living. The second and less apparent understanding is that cemeteries dedicated to a particular group of people – the Icelandic settlers in this case – are a material way of reconnecting or re-membering a community, and not just individuals. These Icelandic cemeteries are sites of collective memory that have emerged out of the historical experience of immigration and settlement to which the gates of the Bildfell cemetery attest

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    • This essay attempts to show that many antebellum Americans imbued their books with a richness of meaning despite the commodification process. As consumer items, books often transcended commercial value and performed varied functions as multivalent objects: they could entertain and educate and their very costliness could convey owners' status, but they also offered solace, kindled memories, and, in general, helped maintain ties to loved ones
    • s they contended with the often dolorous by-products of abundance and capital accumulation--upheaval, mobility, and estrangement from friends and family--they turned to letter writing and diary keeping.  9   Such literary efforts helped them maintain their past connections and to preserve memories of their unfolding lives. "What a world of meetings and partings this is!" one women wrote in 1841 to her parents as she journeyed from her childhood home to a new one on the frontier. "May all who love each other meet in a better world never to be separated!" 10   Her personal papers, and those of many other "Yankee family" members,  11   reveal within their sometimes strained but often eloquent gestures toward preservation of emotional ties, the essential role of books and reading in the social "meaning of things."

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      • "The same identity that anchored readers in the present also connected them w/ their counterparts in the past. books served as legacies, as inheritances, that linked generations of reading women to each other. ... The preservation, by female kin, of the commonplace book that is the only extant document of [the lady who produced it] testifies to identification with a mother and grandmother who had been devoted to reading. [Her] legacy, the inheritance left to later generations, was both the object itself and the devotion to reading that was encoded in it."

      • Hofstader -- difference between intelligence and intellect is that "the latter 'has a certain spontaneous character and inner determination' that sets it apart" + "a peculiar poise of its own... established by a balance btwn 2 basic qualities in the intellectual's attitude toward ideas": playfulness & piety.

        "The carefully chosen passages that fill the pages of commonplace books & autograph albums illustrate... piety" - as opposed to diaries that may be more playful. entries reflect the highly purposeful engagment w/ books.

      • "The world of reading reconstructed from women's letters, commonplace books, diaries, autograph albums, and journals challenges the still familiar idea of female reading as passive consumption of textually determined meanings. it shows..."

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