Harvest Hands: Reapers and Threshers in American and Modern European Art and Literature
Harvest Hands: Reapers and Threshers in American and Modern European Art and Literature
By Richard D. Scheuerman
368 Pages, including full color Gallery of Images and many additional color images throughout
7” x 10” | Paperback
Agrarian art and literature are about humanity’s relationships with the land. Historian Richard Scheuerman’s Harvest Hands: Reapers and Threshers in American and Modern European Art and Literature explores this theme through the work of painters, writers, collectors, and others across the past five centuries. Scheuerman organizes evidence of vital grain harvests being the reliably unifying experience for the wellbeing of civilization. The act of harvesting gives the participants a spiritual bond and understanding of obligations to care for each other and Mother Earth. No matter the differences, such as race, ethnicity, religion, rituals, place, and time; this book shows how harvests have nurtured and sustained various cultures throughout modern history.
Insightful, eloquent, honest, and hopeful, Scheuerman’s work shows that, through the process of land stewardship, harvest does more than feed our bodies: harvesting in harmony with the land also nurtures the heart and soul of mankind. This book reminds us that our care for natural systems is essential to supporting our spirit as well as our populations and should not be taken for granted.
The pantheon of eminent national artists and authors who created masterpieces on agrarian themes includes Vincent Van Gogh, Jean Millet, and Émile Zola; Leo Tolstoy and Russian masters Alexey Venetsianov and Grigoriy Myasoyedov; John Linnell and Lea Anna Merritt of Great Britain; and Americans Fannie Palmer, Willa Cather, and Thomas Hart Benton. Study of Western culture through the centuries also reveals that artistic interpretations of rural experience have been variously shaped by the religious beliefs and predispositions of painter, author, and patron. While depictions of grain harvest generally retain noble aspects across times and cultures, they also can serve to realistically show other harsh realities of rural life, or use the power of symbols like sickles and the gleaning poor to advance political or social causes. Consideration of art and works of fiction and literary-nonfiction through a critical lens informs understandings of the ancient, feudal, and early modern past in ways that also influence contemporary creative expression and meaning making.
Paperback: 284 pages (includes color images)
Publisher: Coyote Hill Press (April 20, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0991264185
ISBN-13: 978-0991264186
Product Dimensions: 7 x 0.7 x 10 inches