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Securing the Past: Conservation in Art, Architecture and Literature
 
 
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Securing the Past: Conservation in Art, Architecture and Literature [Hardcover]

Paul Eggert (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 16, 2009
We all have a stake in the past and in its tangible preservation, and we trust professionals to preserve our cultural heritage for the future. However, restoration in all its forms is entangled in many contemporary theoretical debates and problems. This book is the first concerted effort to examine together the linked philosophies of the different arts of preserving and uncovering the past: the restoration of buildings, conservation of works of art, and editing of literary works to retrieve their original or intended texts. By investigating a series of recent crises in each of these areas, Securing the Past shows how their underlying justifications relate closely to one another. Paul Eggert shows how they have been philosophically undermined by postmodern theories and charts another, richer way forward to a new future for the past.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"Paul Eggert's brave book considers together architectural restoration (houses, churches), art conservation (Rembrandt, the Sistine Chapel, and Leonardo da Vinci), and textual scholarship (German scholarship - including Gabler's Ulysses, Shakespeare and Middleton, Dreiser and Lawrence)...This book is important more for the way it poses problems than for its ability to provide totally satisfactory answers, but only from an approach of this kind are new methodologies likely to arise."
-Philip Gossett, Common Knowledge, Winter 2010

"Paul Eggert, currently Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences of the Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA) of The University of New South Wales has for many years effected a happy marriage between his practice as a critical editor (being responsible for, among others, two major critical editions of D.H. Lawrence published by Cambridge University Press in 1992 and 1994, The Boy From the Bush and Twilight in Italy) and his experience as a scholar of English literature and of textual studies (directing the Australian Scholarly Editions Centre from 1993, and founding and developing the Academy Editions of Australian Literature series which from 1996 to 2007 has issued some ten critical editions). It's precisely such an interplay between theory and practice which now leads Eggert to examine, from an unusually wide perspective and with solid historical-philosophical foundations, the interrelation between the three disciplines of Art, Architecture and Literature and the welter of questions posed for those engaged in restoration and the answers which inevitably reflect a more or less conservative attitude with regard to works of art but even more generally with an idea of a past still alive and in close relation with the present. The examples that Eggert uses to focus attention on common themes are innumerable and contribute to the pleasure of reading a volume that, with a different approach, might have been confined strictly to workers in the field. But that this is far from Eggert's aim is amply demonstrated by his solid and well-structured argumentative prose, always limpid and rational even when dealing with the most difficult issues."

-Translation of a section of a review essay in Italian by Paolo Italia in Ecdotica 6 (2009), 459-466.

"This book is well written, informative and challenging; above all, it provokes questions. Securing the Past will undoubtedly make an important contribution to intellectual debates about the decisions we make as we seek to preserve the past for the future...It is a volume to be highly recommended. I look forward to seeing Eggert's work being picked up and debated in those professional forums where it can make most impact."
-Robyn Sloggett, Cultural Studies

Book Description

The concept and practice of restoration in all its forms are entangled in many contemporary theoretical debates and problems. This book is the first concerted effort to examine together the linked philosophies of the different arts of preserving and uncovering the past.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 302 pages
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 1 edition (February 16, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0521898080
  • ISBN-13: 978-0521898089
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,632,048 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Superb, March 19, 2011
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Paul Eggert approaches the past with a breadth of philosophical insight, a range of examples from the humanities, and a clarity of expression, that few contemporary authors possess. He problematises the concept of 'preservation' with an emphasis on literary work, art work, and architecture, taking into account the many ways in which postmodernity has muddied the waters of 'the text' and 'the author'. He thus constantly reminds us that we - in the present - cannot escape from the objects from the past that we preserve, even as we try to disown their status as 'objects'. He takes us carefully through one paradox after another with the help of philosophy and considerable practical experience as an editor. The result is masterly. The only drawback is the absence of music, or film, perhaps, in Eggert's generous sway.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
editing literary works, editorial gaze, new aesthetes, documentary dimension, clear reading text, final authorial intention, textual agency, scholarly editing, scholarly editors, physical inscription, editorial theory, documentary editing, historical witness
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The Boy, Sistine Chapel, Colonial Williamsburg, New York, New South Wales, Sister Carrie, Michel Foucault, Rembrandt Research Project, New Zealand, Virginia Woolf, Sir Walter Greg, Han van Meegeren, Hyde Park Barracks, Henry Moore, World War, Kow Plains Station, Liz Magor, Dead Christ, Hans Walter Gabler, The Lamentation, Mona Lisa, Alfred Pollard, Oxford Shakespeare, Last Judgement, New Criticism
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