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Scrapbooks: An American History
Scrapbooks: An American History

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Author: Jessica Helfand
Publisher: Yale University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $45.00
Buy New: $27.82
You Save: $17.18 (38%)



New (34) Used (6) from $27.82

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 1179

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.9
Dimensions (in): 12.3 x 9.1 x 0.8

ISBN: 0300126352
Dewey Decimal Number: 709
EAN: 9780300126358
ASIN: 0300126352

Publication Date: November 3, 2008  (New: Last 30 Days)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new item. Over 4 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Few left in stock - order soon. Code: Y20081117105740E

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best of the Month, November 2008: The scrapbook has long been a popular and vital form of self-expression embraced by a cross-section of American society. "To read another person's scrapbook" observes Jessica Helfand in Scrapbooks: An American History, "is to acquire a body of knowledge about an entirely different time and place." Helfand--a prominent graphic designer, art critic, and author--has combined her considerable talents to create one of the most interesting and category-defying books on American culture this year. Through some 200 albums dating from the Victorian era through the present day--albums that Helfand personally curated and researched--Scrapbooks tells the story of ordinary and extraordinary lives, innovative visual ideas, and social change within the larger context of American history. The perfectly presented color photographs of album pages and schematic renderings draw readers right in. And, Helfand's detailed, yet evocative interpretations will keep them glued to the page. Scrapbooks is a special book that engages readers with a palpable sense of the material qualities of historic scrapbooks, and provides a stimulating presentation of the complex social and cultural worlds out of which they emerged. Like any first-rate scrapbook, Scrapbooks is a treasure-trove worth poring over for hours and hours. --Lauren Nemroff

The first book on the history of the American scrapbook. Discover untold stories in America's cultural history through nearly 200 fascinating scrapbooks.

Author Jessica Helfand Describes the Scrapbooks Project

Rich or poor, celebrity or civilian, men, women, and children of all ages kept scrapbooks. Some were ornate, with gilded covers and carefully composed pages of decoupage. Others were retrofitted from secondhand books, with chromolithographs glued sloppily on top of existing texts. Many consisted entirely of clippings, rigorously aligned and chronologically arranged, often around a central theme?pigeons, for instance, or movie stars or, not infrequently, obituaries. There were scrapbooks filled with babies, birds, and baseball statistics; scrapbooks about ice skating, dog breeding, and the intricacies of boy watching. Fragments of cloth from wedding gowns were included in bridal books, while new mothers included gentle locks from their baby’s first haircut. Debutantes saved news clippings, farmers saved weather reports, high school girls saved gum wrappers, and everyone, it seemed, saved greeting cards. Even soldiers kept scrapbooks, pasting in furlough requests, ration cards, and the tattered, beloved photos of their faraway sweethearts. Clumsily folded, haphazardly pasted, randomly annotated with fascinating afterthoughts, the material presence of these personal repositories offers a long-overlooked glimpse into the American spirit. Why did people feel compelled to save the things they did? What did they value, and question, and believe about themselves and the world around them? And how did the things they saved express what they themselves, for whatever reason, could not say in words?

Over time, the scrapbook came to mirror the changing pulse of American cultural life?a life of episodic moments, randomly reflected in a news clipping or a silhouetted photograph, a lock of baby hair or a Western Union telegram. As a genre unto themselves, scrapbooks represent a fascinating, yet virtually unexplored visual vernacular, a world of makeshift means and primitive methods, of gestural madness and unruly visions, of piety and poetry and a million private plagiarisms. As author, editor, photographer, curator, and inevitable protagonist, the scrapbook maker engaged in what seems today, in retrospect, a comparatively crude exercise in graphic design. Combining pictures, words, and a wealth of personal ephemera, the resulting works represent amateur yet stunningly authoritative examples of a particular strain of visual autobiography, a genre rich in emotional, pictorial, and sensory detail. --Jessica Helfand

Get a Closer Look at Scrapbooks
(click on images to enlarge)

Zelda Fitzgerald's Scrapbook 1000 Journals Project, 2000-present
Harn Scrapbook, 1920s
His Service Record, 1942; USO Scrapbook; Victory Scrapbook, 1942 Kelley Scrapbook, 1927




Product Description

Combining pictures, words, and a wealth of personal ephemera, scrapbook makers preserve on the pages of their books a moment, a day, or a lifetime. Highly subjective and rich in emotional content, the scrapbook is a unique and often quirky form of expression in which a person gathers and arranges meaningful materials to create a personal narrative. This lavishly illustrated book is the first to focus attention on the history of American scrapbooks—their origins, their makers, their diverse forms, the reasons for their popularity, and their place in American culture.

Jessica Helfand, a graphic designer and scrapbook collector, examines the evolution of scrapbooks from the beginning of the nineteenth century to the present, concentrating on the first half of the twentieth century. She includes color photographs from more than two hundred scrapbooks, some made by private individuals and others by the famous, including Zelda Fitzgerald, Lillian Hellman, Anne Sexton, Hilda Doolittle, and Carl Van Vechten. Scrapbooks, while generally made by amateurs, represent a striking and authoritative form of visual autobiography, Helfand finds, and when viewed collectively they offer a unique perspective on the changing pulses of American cultural life.

Published with assistance from Furthermore: a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Scrapbooks: An American History   October 4, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Scrapbooks: An American Historyis filled with beautiful glimpses into the past. I have spent this whole day just looking at the photographs of the scrapbooks, reading the entries, scribbles and notes along the edges of the stuff others collected and lovingly pasted onto the pages. It it like stepping back in time.

It's color photographs are crisp and detailed. The narrative is informative and holds your attention. It appears to be a work that was loving compiled.

Thank you Ms. Helfand for this work of art, it has reminded me why I have a drawer full of ticket stubs, postcards, and other items my husband calls clutter. Now to find a scrapbook.



5 out of 5 stars A beautiful book that kids and adults will appreciate and cherish   October 12, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Jessica Helfand's latest book is a not just beautiful, it is the last word on scrapbooking. If it's not in Scrapbooks: An American History, it doesn't exist. This compendium of scrapbook components is a treat for the eye. It's impossible not to pick this up and keep turning the pages. I love this book and I'm going to give copies to all my friends who have an appreciation of lovely things.


5 out of 5 stars Fascinating and Beautiful   October 22, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Jessica's latest effort builds on the brilliance of her previous offerings. WIth great rigor, intelligence, beauty and wit, Helfand provides a compelling and thorough history of the art and craft of the Scrapbook. This is a truly great book.


3 out of 5 stars The history of scrapbooking   November 28, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a beautiful book allowing us a glimpse into some gorgeous examples of vintage scrapbooks. The photos of the books are so well done you feel like you could touch the different textures of photos and scraps attached to the pages. If you are interested in the history of true scrapbooking then you should definitely buy this book. It is a work of love.

That said, modern scrapbookers beware. I agree with the author that the kind of scrapbooking she is presenting is closer to the original meaning of the word and hobby. Everyday scraps of ephemera are collected and pasted onto pages...with no thought to design or it's future readers other than what pleases the maker. It was a beloved personal hobby that can now, unknowingly, give us glimpses into what life might have been like for that person, or at least what might have been on their mind.
I agree with the author that modern scrapbooking has become almost soul-less...all about expensive papers, embellishments and posed photos. In this modern manufactured world, it seems that scrapbooking memories is also as such.
If you are interested in how scrapbooking began, about how generations of women (and intelligent men!) before us saved their memories, you will love this book. If you've gotten stuck in a modern scrapbooking rut and want to put more meaning to your hobby, this book will be inspiring and may change your direction.

The only element that I do not like about this book is that there is a bit of snobbish-ness about the whole phenomena. I respect that Ms.Helfand is an art critic and graphic designer, but I wish that she would have left her opinions about the books she is presenting out and just concentrated on the history of scrapbooking itself.

The people who created the vintage scrapbooks and the people who create modern scrapbooks share one thing...scrapbooks are born of their love, of their sense of fun, and their awareness of the life they are living, however they choose to record that in a book.


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