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DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Fire Craft

Erin E. O’Connor

Art, Body, and World Among Glassblowers

Barcode 9780231218443
Paperback

Original price £23.04 - Original price £23.04
Original price
£23.04
£23.04 - £23.04
Current price £23.04

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Release Date: 12/08/2025

Genre: Arts & Photography
Label: Columbia University Press
Language: English
Publisher: Columbia University Press

Art, Body, and World Among Glassblowers
In Fire Craft, Erin E. O’Connor interweaves an immersive firsthand account of her experiences learning to blow glass with a sensuous ethnography of embodiment and community among glassblowers.
Glassblowing by hand might seem like a dying art, yet it is thriving: Studios and universities offer popular classes, and glass art is widely exhibited and sold. Amateur and professional glassblowers alike are captivated by the choreography of fire, smoke, and molten material. Why are people drawn to this ancient craft? What is distinctive about the social, physical, and intellectual experience of glassblowing? How does the body learn an art?

In Fire Craft, Erin E. O’Connor interweaves an immersive firsthand account of her experiences learning to blow glass with a sensuous ethnography of embodiment and community among glassblowers. Through compelling stories, such as her struggle to produce an elegant goblet, she shows how a novice becomes hooked by and committed to a craft. Reflecting on embodied knowledge, O’Connor considers how we negotiate mistakes and failures, how we strive to develop proficiency in the face of shortcomings, and how through making objects we make meaning. She also explores the history of glassblowing and how various social, environmental, and knowledge frameworks shape the valorization of craft. From the furnaces of empire to the hot bodies of collaboration and love, O’Connor reveals the interconnectedness of the body with the elemental world. A gripping tale of the social world and experience of glassblowing, Fire Craft passionately defends practical labor as intellectual work that changes self and society.