A representative sample of seven ships from the Revolutionary War--American and British; privateers and regular warships--are fully described in this book by one of the best-known ship modelers in the world; Harold Hahn. Those included are the 44-gun ship HMS Roebuck; the 16-gun sloop HMS Druid; the U.S. frigates Hancock and Confederacy; the U.S. privateer Oliver Cromwell; the 205-ton HMS Pelican; and the 74-gun HMS Alfred. The first half of this book deals with the history of each vessel. The remaining chapters are devoted to step-by-step detailed descriptions of building a model; using the Alfred; the largest and most complex of these ships; as the prime subject. Specially commissioned photographs illustrate every stage of development; and full sets of plans for each ship are provided. This handsome book will enthrall model builders and also appeal to historians and everyone interested in ships.
#920949 in Books Michigan State University Press 2000-09-20Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.00 x .90 x 6.00l; .92 #File Name: 0870135244368 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. FascinatingBy Stephanie L. ThompsonI bought this book to help with a course I am creating. The essays are quite interesting. If you have any interest at all in material culture; this is a fascinating and highly readable text. I would also recommend it to anyone looking for a good text to use for students in an undergraduate or even a graduate level course.3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. An excellent textbook-by-example in the material aspects of social historyBy Michael K. SmithBasically; "material culture" refers to stuff. Mostly ordinary; everyday stuff. An "artifact" is anything made or modified by humans; which means every work of art is an artifact; but not all artifacts are art. Prown is Emeritus Professor of Art History at Yale; so he's a very big gun indeed; and although he took over the university's material culture course as a stop-gap when the previous professor died; he has become so identified with the field now that his process of examining; analyzing; and interpreting everyday things has become known as "Prownian analysis."This collection presents a dozen essays by Prown's former students (plus a short theoretical chapter by Prown himself); the best of some hundreds; and each of them follows the same system; more or less; of describing an artifact in great detail; working out why it was made that way (the predecessor designs; the creator's intentions; artistic vs. practical aspects); what its purpose was; how it fits into the context of human society; how it "signifies;" the examiner's emotional responses; and other points that the inexperienced viewer probably would never have thought of. But this is all of great interest to the social historian.And the selection of artifacts considered is very wide: A Victorian cellerette or wine cooler; with remarkable mourning imagery. A 1923 model candlestick telephone. An Amish quilt. A woman's corset from the 1880s. An iron footbridge located in a public park near the Yale campus. A tortoiseshell locket from the Gilded Age. A hand-cranked kitchen food mill from the 1920s. A novelty Lucite table lighter from c.1985. A lava lamp; very like the one I used to have in the dorm.No great art; no oils or sculptures; just ordinary items that almost any individual or family might have owned -- and that's the point. Works we create as individual pieces are consciously different in their intent from items manufactured in some quantity for general consumption. And by studying a souvenir doll from an amusement park; or a carved Federal doorway; or a Winchester '73 rifle; or a Polaroid camera; or a cheap pair of drugstore sunglasses; or even a steam locomotive; you can get a better grasp on the society; the social context; in which each of them was made. And that tells you about the people who made them; the worlds in which they lived; and what they thought about and what they considered important.Depending on your own interests; some of these essays will hold you more than others; but all are very well written. Prown; in fact; made a point of instructing his students to "make their research disappear;" to write in a way that was easy and appealing to read. There are a great many illustrations; too. This is a terrific book for encouraging one to look at one's surrounding world and its contents in a more thoughtful way.12 of 13 people found the following review helpful. Thirteen superb commentaries by men and womenBy Midwest Book ReviewIn American Artifacts: Essays In Material Culture; Jules Prown and Ken Haltman have assembled thirteen superb commentaries by men and women who articulately explore the cultural and social meanings ascribed to a variety of common objects ranging from teapots; cart tables; and quilts; to cigarette lighters; telephones; and lava lamps. Here is an impressive and "reader friendly" collection of essays that are as informative and thought-provoking as they are erudite and challenging. American Artifacts is highly recommended reading for students of American popular culture and art.