Copyright
Ruth RosengartenPublished On
2022-08-23ISBN
Paperback978-1-80064-374-1
Hardback978-1-80064-375-8
PDF978-1-80064-376-5
HTML978-1-80064-670-4
XML978-1-80064-379-6
EPUB978-1-80064-377-2
AZW3978-1-80064-378-9
Language
- English
Print Length
292 pages (xi+281)Dimensions
Paperback156 x 20 x 234 mm(6.14" x 0.79" x 9.21")
Hardback156 x 23 x 234 mm(6.14" x 0.91" x 9.21")
Weight
Paperback558g (19.68oz)
Hardback731g (25.79oz)
Media
Illustrations39
OCLC Number
1343160811LCCN
2021386017BIC
- BG
- JMRM
- JFCD
- AGB
- AJB
- DSA
BISAC
- BIO000000
- BIO022000
- BIO001000
- ART065000
- PHO011010
LCC
- N6797.R5765
Keywords
- evocative objects
- memories
- materiality
- loss
- migration
- childless woman
Second Chance
My Life in Things
- Ruth Rosengarten (author)
In this intimate memoir, Ruth Rosengarten explores the subject of evocative objects through a series of interconnected essays.
Evocative objects reflect our attitudes to our own lives and how we seek to display ourselves to ourselves. They are therefore, closely linked to our memories, and how we filter, process and reconstruct them. Rosengarten explores the themes and associations invoked by her own evocative objects, which are frequently shabby things of no material value. They are, importantly, often objects that, in their materiality, bear traces of actions, of something-having-been. Through the associative pathways that these objects have paved, she discusses her experiences with the losses she has undergone, her family’s migrations, and what it means to be a childless woman. This leads her to address the question of what will become of her storied objects and the memories attached to them when she is no longer in existence.
This memoir offers an interdisciplinary approach to collecting and compiling fragments of one’s life, paying close attention to the evocative objects that embody us. In doing so, these essays explore loss, memory, childlessness, longing, family history, literature and art theory through material entities which reveal the immaterial ‘things’ at the heart of this study. This book is sure to be of interest to anyone stimulated by memory work and the relationship between humans and their possessions.
Endorsements
Photographs, shopping lists, cigarette lighters, locks of hair, glasses, dentures— the stuff of a life lived and remembered across the times and spaces of exile and migration. Second Chance invites us to go back to the things we have saved, enriched by Rosengarten’s deep reflections on our lives with things.
Marianne Hirsch
Author of 'The Generation of Postmemory'
Contents
Situating
(pp. 1–22)- Ruth Rosengarten
Hair
(pp. 23–46)- Ruth Rosengarten
Orphaned
(pp. 47–66)- Ruth Rosengarten
Abject
(pp. 67–76)- Ruth Rosengarten
Nature
(pp. 77–92)- Ruth Rosengarten
Album
(pp. 93–110)- Ruth Rosengarten
Photograph
(pp. 111–132)- Ruth Rosengarten
List
(pp. 133–146)- Ruth Rosengarten
Stain
(pp. 147–164)- Ruth Rosengarten
Unforgotten
(pp. 165–180)- Ruth Rosengarten
Time
(pp. 181–192)- Ruth Rosengarten
Studio
(pp. 193–202)- Ruth Rosengarten
Still
(pp. 203–220)- Ruth Rosengarten
Happiness
(pp. 221–232)- Ruth Rosengarten
Lost
(pp. 233–242)- Ruth Rosengarten
Hair
(pp. 243–253)- Ruth Rosengarten
Afterword
(pp. 254–257)- Ruth Rosengarten