A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture

by Michael Kammen

Hardcover, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

700.4273

Publication

The University of North Carolina Press (2004), Edition: 1st, 400 pages

Description

In artworks from a mosaic by Marc Chagall to schoolchildren's paintings, in writings from Susan Fenimore Cooper to Annie Dillard, and in diverse print sources from family genealogical registers to seed catalogs, the four seasons appear and reappear as a theme in American culture. In this richly illustrated book, Michael Kammen traces the appeal of the four seasons motif in American popular culture and fine arts from the seventeenth century to the present. Its symbolism has evolved through the years, Kammen explains, serving as a metaphor for the human life cycle or religious faith, expressing nostalgia for rural life, and sometimes praising seasonal beauty in the diverse American landscape as the most spectacular in the world. Kammen also highlights artists' and writers' shift in attention from the glories of seasonal peaks to the dynamics of seasonal transitions as American life continued to accelerate and change through the twentieth century. Few symbols have been as pervasive, meaningful, and symptomatic in the human experience as the four seasons, and as Kammen shows, in its American context the annual cycle has been an abundant and abiding source of inspiration in the nation's cultural history.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Big_Bang_Gorilla
Being a critical survey of works, primarily literature and art, which treat of the four seasons. The author is erudite and insightful at times, but his poor choice of emphases limits the book's pleasures. After a perfunctory first chapter describing such works in the Old World which consists mostly
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of lists of dates of creation, he presents his best chapters, which deal with American nature writing of the nineteenth century. Later chapters, which obsess in excruciating detail on a group of nature writers from the mid-twentieth century who are mostly not well-remembered, and graphic artists from the turn of the century, again mostly pretty obscure, slow the book to a crawl. Music, realia, television, and movies are very briefly summarized. A coda on the science of seasonal change is unnecessary and the space would have been better spent on an examination of the changes in perception wrought by global heating, an odd omission.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

400 p.; 10.5 inches

ISBN

080782836X / 9780807828366
Page: 0.6743 seconds