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  • The Power of Objects in Eighteenth-Century British America by Jennifer Van Horn
  • Patricia Samford
Jennifer Van Horn. The Power of Objects in Eighteenth-Century British America. Chapel Hill: Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia, by the University of North Carolina Press, 2017. Pp. 456. 11 color plates, 130 halftones, notes, index. Hardcover, $49.95.

In The Power of Objects in Eighteenth-Century British America, Jennifer Van Horn skillfully illustrates the transformative power of material culture on [End Page 132] elite British American society. Deftly interweaving material evidence with literary and historical texts, Van Horn demonstrates how objects like portraits, dressing tables, prints, prostheses, and gravestones can, quite literally, transform bodies, crafting a polite and mannered society. Themes of politeness, civility and the creation of national and individual identities are leitmotifs in this volume, as is the distancing of one's self from the "savage other" or the wild, discussed here as African Americans and Native Americans. Each chapter focuses on a different type of material culture, progressing from more public-facing objects, such as long-view prints of cities, portraits, and tombstones, to more individual or private artifacts, including artificial limbs and dressing tables where women practiced the art of concealment through toilette.

Cityscape "long views" of American urban areas carved from the wilderness served as a counter to British misconceptions about the colonies as places of savagery. Often done at massive scales and from the vantage point of the harbor, these prints were detailed enough to provide American funders with meticulous views of the city's buildings and monuments. These long views presented orderly vistas of places like Philadelphia and Charleston, but at a scale that hid the filth, disease, and crime that is a part of any city landscape. Van Horn argues that the London printers who produced the long views downscaled the prints for British magazines, intentionally diminishing the importance and prominence of North American cities.

While long views illustrated civilization carved from the wilderness, American elites used portraiture to demonstrate politeness and civility at an individual level. The sitter was often placed in a setting that provided a larger context for that individual's urbanity and livelihood, showing connections to the larger world of trade, commerce, and the arts. Van Horn argues that in North America, and particularly in Philadelphia, the presence of British-born and European-trained artists helped create an aesthetic community of elites who had been transformed and civilized by portraiture. Through the hands of the artist, human passions were tamed to create neutral countenances and bodily postures that expressed the sitter's civilized character. As with the cityscapes, British authors and theorists denigrated American artistic progress, arguing that Americans, through the contact with other races, were "poorly controlled barbarians" (149). Native Americans and African Americans appear throughout this book as the "savage other," serving as a counterpoint to white elite society. [End Page 133]

While British American elites emulated their peers in England, some cultural traditions were impractical in the colonies. Intramural burials within churches allowed wealthy British citizens to segregate themselves from the lower classes buried outside; the hot and humid climate of Charleston made this practice impossible. Forced to use the same churchyard burial grounds as less socially acceptable classes, elite Charlestonians sought to separate themselves in death by erecting detailed portrait gravestones. In the socially leveling communal space of the graveyard, these stones and their text extolling the virtues and politeness of the deceased were a way of carving out an eternal "civil" space for oneself after death. These gravestone portraits mirrored miniatures that were worn or carried by the elite as mementos of loved ones.

In chapter 4 Van Horn uses portraits of young American females painted in masquerade clothing as a metaphor for pre-Revolutionary America throwing off bonds of British identity. Most of these masquerade portraits were created of young women during courtship, at the peak of their greatest social and sexual power. At this particular time, females were encouraged to conceal interest in particular suitors, thereby maintaining power over them until they finally unmask their true desires. America is portrayed as a young, virginal female...

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