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| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 110.4 | The History Cooperative
110.4  
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October, 2005
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Book Review

Canada and the United States



Michael Kammen. A Time to Every Purpose: The Four Seasons in American Culture. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 2004. Pp. 336. $39.95.

One of the great pleasures of Michael Kammen's new book are the forty-eight color plates of paintings, vases, prints, and other media representing seasons of the year. The richly reproduced works of art range from Roman mosaics and medieval tapestry to paintings by Jasper Cropsey, Marsden Hartley, Paul Cadmus, and Felix de la Concha and prints by Jennifer Bartlett and Will Barnet. Even before one starts reading, the sumptuous plates are an invitation to reflect on the theme and variations of seasons as they have been handled in different eras. This visual narrative is matched by a remarkable catalog of American writers who over the course of two centuries have written about seasons, both literally as observers of the natural world and figuratively as poets developing metaphors for the cycles of life and creativity. Kammen is at his most eloquent in appreciating the work of writers like Henry David Thoreau or Wallace Stevens, who integrate a powerful sense of the seasonality of nature with an equally profound sense of seasons in human life and work. . . .

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