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Tennessee Samplers - by Jennifer Core & Janet S Hasson (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- "This extensive study, nearly twenty years in the making, is a major contribution to the understanding of American textile material culture.
- About the Author: JENNIFER C. CORE is executive director of the Tennessee Historical Society and cofounder and director of the Tennessee Sampler Survey.
- 776 Pages
- Art, Women Artists
Description
About the Book
"Samplers reflected female education in the south and how those views changed over time. The majority of samplers documented by Jennifer Core and Janet Hasson are from the 1830s through the 1850s and feature a signature band including the maker's name and the date of completion. They reflect Tennessee's three grand divisions as well. For instance, the samplers of East Tennessee bear a striking resemblance to Virginia's samplers while West Tennessee's samplers are fewer in number and vary in size and format, reflecting the less settled region. Core and Hasson argue that this snapshot of Tennessee as seen through girl's education and craft informs our understanding of women's history prior to the Civil War as, after all, if an unmarried woman died prior to 1850, her sampler may have been the only proof of her existence"--
Book Synopsis
"This extensive study, nearly twenty years in the making, is a major contribution to the understanding of American textile material culture." - Candace J. Adelson, Senior Curator of Fashion and Textiles Emeritus, Tennessee State Museum
Containing dozens of beautiful, full-color photographs, Jennifer C. Core and Janet S. Hasson's study of samplers--embroideries that are "first attempts at a new technique, color combination, or unusual material"--provides vivid descriptions of this nineteenth-century Tennessee art form in its many varieties. The authors not only catalogue and describe samplers from each of Tennessee's major regions--West, Middle, and East--but also incorporate research on the sampler makers and their families. This research provides fascinating insight into the stitchers, their teachers, and their academies.
Including a chapter on female education on the Tennessee frontier and another on embroideries and needlework focused on mourning, the volume draws on oral histories of the embroiderers' descendants, family Bibles, diaries, scrapbooks, cemetery records, and other primary sources. Photos of the samplers are accompanied by detailed descriptions of styles, thread count, materials used, frames, and motifs. Ultimately, the study provides a glimpse of the lives of girls and young women in nineteenth-century Tennessee, including the role of this ornamental art in their education.
Providing important historical context on Tennessee education, economy, and domestic life, Core and Hasson describe how embroidery came to be a crucial primary source in revealing the lives of girls and young women during a time when little was recorded about them. This book is an authoritative record of the material culture produced in the daily routine of school rooms. It is for all who see beauty in sometimes-overlooked handiwork and understand the importance of curating, preserving, and analyzing it.
Review Quotes
"This book is the perfect combination of artistry and history. The samplers each tell their own story, and the authors' work to discover more about the girls who stitched them adds a whole new dimension."
- Chuck Sherrill, former Tennessee State Librarian and Archivist
About the Author
JENNIFER C. CORE is executive director of the Tennessee Historical Society and cofounder and director of the Tennessee Sampler Survey.
JANET S. HASSON, former curator of Belle Meade Plantation, is cofounder and secretary-treasurer of the Tennessee Sampler Survey.