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Paris Concealed : Masks in the City of Light

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A comprehensive history of masks in France from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century.   Masks can conceal, disguise, or protect. They can announce status, inspire delight, or spread fear.

They can also betray trust through insincerity, deceit, and hypocrisy.

In Paris Concealed, historian James H. Johnson offers a sweeping history of masks both visible and unseen from the time of Louis XIV to the late nineteenth century, exploring the complex roles that masking and unmasking have played in the fashioning of our social selves.   Drawing from memoirs, novels, plays, and paintings, Paris Concealed explores the many domains in which masks have been decisive.

Beginning in the court of Versailles, Johnson charts the genesis of courtly politesse and its wide condemnation by Enlightenment philosophers and political thinkers.

He narrates strategies in the French Revolution for unmasking traitors and later efforts to penetrate criminal disguises through telltale marks on the body.

He portrays the disruptive power of masks in public balls and carnivals and, with the coming of modernity, evokes their unsettling presence within the unconscious.    Compellingly written and beautifully illustrated, Paris Concealed lays bare the mask’s transformations, from marking one’s position in a static society to embracing imagined identities in meritocracies to impeding the elusive search for one’s true self.  To tell the history of masks, Johnson shows, is to tell the history of modern selfhood.  

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£28.80 Save 20.00%
RRP £36.00
Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226836460 / 9780226836461
Hardback
22/01/2025
United States
400 pages, 4 color plates, 67 halftones
152 x 229 mm, 454 grams