This article begins by outlining some of the ways in which objects have been understood to have consolatory functions in Western culture. It then explores how a recent shift in thinking about things is emerging both within academic discourse and in popular works of creative none-fiction such as Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking and Edmund de Waala’s The Hare with the Amber Eyes. This new materialist thinking offers the potential to challenge accepted understandings of the consola- tion to be found in human/thing relations. This potential is explored with particular reference to Etty Hillesum’s war-time journals which place the consolation of things in a challenging and creative theological frame
This thesis examines the ways in which the writings of Henry Parland, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...
The argument behind our introductory essay, as well as behind our special issue of the Metacritic Jo...
The article critically investigates 'faith' through 'objects' metaphysical, real, and divine; fundam...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)The creative component of this thesis is a novel, Ord...
Throughout history and across social and cultural contexts, most systems of belief-whether religious...
Humans are surrounded by objects. The human-object interaction is more frequent than the human-human...
This article interrogates the role of the human imagination in ordinary perception and orientation, ...
The objects and artefacts that populate our lives contain an indelible darkness, an "unseeness" whic...
In the present volume, the third of the series Annals of Cultural Psychology, Giuseppina Marsico and...
This paper analyses the spiritual consolation of domestic objects - Christmas decorations, food, flo...
The Meaning of Things explores the meanings of household possessions for three generation families i...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
This studio-based research project examines the perception and meanings of ordinary objects as a way...
Over the last 20 years, studies of material culture have increasingly come to rely on the assumption...
This thesis examines the ways in which the writings of Henry Parland, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...
The argument behind our introductory essay, as well as behind our special issue of the Metacritic Jo...
The article critically investigates 'faith' through 'objects' metaphysical, real, and divine; fundam...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)The creative component of this thesis is a novel, Ord...
Throughout history and across social and cultural contexts, most systems of belief-whether religious...
Humans are surrounded by objects. The human-object interaction is more frequent than the human-human...
This article interrogates the role of the human imagination in ordinary perception and orientation, ...
The objects and artefacts that populate our lives contain an indelible darkness, an "unseeness" whic...
In the present volume, the third of the series Annals of Cultural Psychology, Giuseppina Marsico and...
This paper analyses the spiritual consolation of domestic objects - Christmas decorations, food, flo...
The Meaning of Things explores the meanings of household possessions for three generation families i...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
This studio-based research project examines the perception and meanings of ordinary objects as a way...
Over the last 20 years, studies of material culture have increasingly come to rely on the assumption...
This thesis examines the ways in which the writings of Henry Parland, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf...
This article examines interdisciplinary phenomena relating to the so-called ‘return of religion’ alo...
The argument behind our introductory essay, as well as behind our special issue of the Metacritic Jo...