Sentinel: The Unlikely Origins of the Statue of Liberty

Author:   Francesca Lidia Viano
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
ISBN:  

9780674975606


Pages:   592
Publication Date:   22 October 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Sentinel: The Unlikely Origins of the Statue of Liberty


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Full Product Details

Author:   Francesca Lidia Viano
Publisher:   Harvard University Press
Imprint:   Harvard University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 4.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.953kg
ISBN:  

9780674975606


ISBN 10:   067497560
Pages:   592
Publication Date:   22 October 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Lively, detailed, and full of surprises, a fascinating account of the Statue of Liberty's conception and construction.--James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University In her astonishing narrative, Viano overturns virtually every assumption Americans have about their famous statue standing in New York's harbor. Her global story traces how a 'devilish colossus, ' inspired by Eastern esoteric knowledge and meant to stand in Egypt as a testament of French colonial domination, became an ambiguous symbol of American liberty. Viano's indefatigable research into long-forgotten documents has yielded a truly wonderful history.--R. Laurence Moore, Cornell University The Statue of Liberty is so American, and so bound up with an idea of America's largesse and openness to the rest of the world, that we can easily forget that it was designed by an Alsatian sculptor and gifted to the United States by France. Francesca Viano brilliantly reorients the statue's meaning by recovering its truly international origins. At once a detective story about its enigmatic creators, an appreciation of the artistic and philosophical influences that informed its design, and a rumination on liberty--colossal but fragile--in an age of empire, Sentinel offers a dazzling perspective on the most famous statue in the world.--Nicholas Guyatt, University of Cambridge Sentinel is a cornucopia of a book, not just an in-depth history of the origins and evolution of an iconic monument, but a narrative full of insights. Viano writes with breathtaking scope and remarkable knowledge. No other work on the Statue of Liberty is as rich or rewarding.--John Brewer, California Institute of Technology


Lively, detailed, and full of surprises, a fascinating account of the Statue of Liberty's conception and construction.--James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University Sentinel is a cornucopia of a book, not just an in-depth history of the origins and evolution of an iconic monument, but a narrative full of insights. Viano writes with breathtaking scope and remarkable knowledge. No other work on the Statue of Liberty is as rich or rewarding.--John Brewer, California Institute of Technology


Lively, detailed, and full of surprises, a fascinating account of the Statue of Liberty's conception and construction.--James T. Kloppenberg, Harvard University In her astonishing narrative, Viano overturns virtually every assumption Americans have about their famous statue standing in New York's harbor. Her global story traces how a 'devilish colossus, ' inspired by Eastern esoteric knowledge and meant to stand in Egypt as a testament of French colonial domination, became an ambiguous symbol of American liberty. Viano's indefatigable research into long-forgotten documents has yielded a truly wonderful history.--R. Laurence Moore, Cornell University Fascinating...and relentlessly inquisitive...The thrust of her argument rings true: Lady Liberty is fiercer and far more complex than we ever knew.--Michael O'Donnell Wall Street Journal (11/09/2018) An attempt to pick apart the complex and sometimes strange history of this colossal gift to America from the government and people of France.--The Economist (11/09/2018) Viano's revisionist account of the statue's 'unlikely origins' is a welcome corrective to settled opinion...This is superb scholarship, interpreted with an elegant touch and beautifully produced.--Stephen Bayley Spectator (11/10/2018) Does as much as any book can...to restore Bartholdi's grim goddess some of her original mystery, and in the process it tells the story of Liberty's birth with a probing complexity that's a far better tribute to both the country of her origin and the country that welcomed her, the most prominent immigrant in the world.--Steve Donoghue Open Letters Review (11/14/2018) Extravagant and gripping... Sentinel offers a sweeping dual narrative and reads like a Victorian novel. Viano writes with the flair of a novelist and a historian's humility. The research is prodigious, the set piece alive with detail.-- (12/01/2018) The Statue of Liberty is so American, and so bound up with an idea of America's largesse and openness to the rest of the world, that we can easily forget that it was designed by an Alsatian sculptor and gifted to the United States by France. Francesca Viano brilliantly reorients the statue's meaning by recovering its truly international origins. At once a detective story about its enigmatic creators, an appreciation of the artistic and philosophical influences that informed its design, and a rumination on liberty--colossal but fragile--in an age of empire, Sentinel offers a dazzling perspective on the most famous statue in the world.--Nicholas Guyatt, University of Cambridge Sentinel is a cornucopia of a book, not just an in-depth history of the origins and evolution of an iconic monument, but a narrative full of insights. Viano writes with breathtaking scope and remarkable knowledge. No other work on the Statue of Liberty is as rich or rewarding.--John Brewer, California Institute of Technology


Author Information

Francesca Lidia Viano is a Fellow at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University. She has written extensively on the history of economic and political exchanges in the Atlantic World.

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