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El. knyga: Colours of Our Memories

3.78/5 (410 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2020
  • Leidėjas: Polity Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509533954
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 08-Sep-2020
  • Leidėjas: Polity Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509533954
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What remains of the colours of our childhood? What are our memories of a blue rabbit, a red dress, a yellow bike? Were they really those colours? And later on, what colours do we associate with our student years, our first loves, our adult life? How does colour leave its mark on memory? How does it stimulate memory? How does it transform it? Or, to reverse that question, how does colour become the victim of memory's whims and lapses?

In an attempt to reply to these questions - and to many others - Michel Pastoureau presents us with a journal about colours that covers over half a century (1950-2010). Through personal memories, notes taken on the spot, uninhibited comments, scholarly digressions and the remarks of a professional historian, this book retraces the recent history of colours in France and Europe. Among the fields of observation that are covered or evoked are the vocabulary and data of language, fashion and clothing, everyday objects and practices, emblems and flags, sport, literature, painting, museums and the history of art.

This text - playful, poetic, nostalgic - records the life of both the author and his contemporaries. We live in a world increasingly bursting with colour, in which colour remains a focus for memory, a source of delight and, most of all, an invitation to dream.

Recenzijos

"In this lovely memoir, Pastoureau shares some of the colour associations that signposted his childhood and young adulthood. Embracing the belief that our identities depend on the memories we accumulate, Pastoureau elegantly shows how memories themselves are shaped by colour." Times Higher Education

"The ubiquity of colour in modern society blinds us to its cultural significance. In his dazzling new book - a kaleidoscopic mix of historical research and personal memoir - Michel Pastoureau brilliantly reflects on what colour means, and what colours mean, from the underwear drawer to the TV screen." Jonathon Keats, author of Virtual Words and Forged

"In this book the distinguished medievalist Michel Pastoureau uses his memoirs to frame reflections on a variety of historical topics that include the history of jeans, the history of signalling and the language of colour in ancient Greece. The author carries his learning lightly and writes with fluency, grace and humour." Peter Burke, University of Cambridge

"A wonderful book made up of personal memories, those of a generation born after the war, of notes taken at the time and of scholarly explanations. Thanks to Michel Pastoureau and to the generosity of his erudition and clarity of his analyses, our life suddenly seems much richer." LExpress

"This unusual autobiographical reflection is consistent with Michel Pastoureaus reputation as a leading historian of colours.  Here he draws readers into his distinctive way of thinking about the role that colours play in our memory, showing how our memories open up new fields of research: one rediscovers the objects of everyday life and of mass consumption, the cinema, literature and art, not to mention his cherished theme of heraldry. Through these reflections the reader retraces the history of colours and their theorization in the West. This book is a delight and it will awaken in readers a new curiosity about the world around them." Etudes: Revue de Culture Contemporaine

"the writing is informative, often amusing, and delightfully readable." Australian Journal of Politics and History

The Colours of Our Memories ishistory, memoir, semiotics, a study of material culture and perceptual change all wrapped into an engagingly readable, accessible narrative full of intriguing topics that few people ever think about unprodded but will find invariably interesting, even fascinating. Consciousness, Literature and the Arts

Acknowledgements x
Colour: an aide-memoire xi
1 Clothing
1(26)
In the beginning was yellow
1(2)
Turbulent stripes
3(2)
The navy-blue blazer
5(2)
Subversive trousers
7(3)
A particular blue
10(1)
From the garment to the myth
11(4)
Colour against flesh
15(2)
Neutral shades in good taste
17(3)
Mitterand beige
20(2)
Slimming colours
22(2)
In the London Underground
24(3)
2 Daily Life
27(25)
My mother's pharmacy
27(3)
The sad tale of young Philippe
30(3)
Sweet dispensers
33(2)
Choosing a colour: an impossible undertaking?
35(3)
Greyness
38(2)
Metro tickets
40(2)
Red or blue?
42(1)
Traffic lights
43(2)
Colour and design: a missed chance?
45(4)
Eating colours
49(3)
3 The Arts and Letters
52(31)
In a painter's studio
52(2)
A painter caught between two volumes
54(2)
In darkened halls
56(3)
Ivanhoe
59(3)
`Vowels'
62(2)
The Red and the Black
64(2)
Chretien de Troyes at the cinema
66(1)
Pink pigs and black pigs
67(2)
When Dali assigned marks
69(2)
The colours of a great painter
71(3)
Historians without colours
74(4)
The workings of time
78(5)
4 On Sports Grounds
83(16)
Goals and referees
83(2)
The yellow bike
85(4)
Bartali and the Italian flag
89(2)
The Tour de l'Ouest (the Western Cycling Tour)
91(2)
Colour by default
93(2)
Easy colours and difficult ones
95(2)
Pink and orange
97(2)
5 Myths and Symbols
99(24)
Little Red Ridinghood
99(2)
Long live school Latin!
101(2)
My discovery of heraldry
103(3)
The black cat
106(2)
Green superstitions
108(3)
The colour of destiny
111(2)
Furling the colours
113(2)
A historical object that is alarming
115(2)
Playing chess
117(2)
Wittgenstein and heraldic colours
119(4)
6 On Tastes and Colours
123(24)
An American gift
123(2)
Sunbathing through the years
125(2)
The `bling' of the 1950s
127(3)
A brief history of gold
130(5)
A mysterious shade of green
135(2)
Do you see red clearly?
137(2)
No purple for children
139(3)
The whims of memory
142(2)
Preferences and opinion polls
144(3)
7 Words
147(21)
Brown and beige
147(2)
Spelling and grammar
149(3)
A day at the races
152(2)
The zero degree of colour
154(3)
A part that stands for the whole
157(2)
The Greek blue
159(3)
The demise of nuances
162(2)
Speaking of colours without showing them
164(4)
What is colour? 168(5)
Bibliography 173(6)
A few helpful chronological details 179(2)
Index 181
Michel Pastoureau is chair of the history of medieval symbolism at the École pratique des hautes etudes, and one of the worlds leading authorities on the history of colours. His many previous books include Blue, Black and The Devil's Cloth.