Article

 

After Brongniart: Defining the Word “Ceramic” and the Persistence of “Burnt Stuff” Open Access Deposited

Downloadable Content

File thumbnail: Carr-Trebelhorn_AfterBrongniartBurntStuffWP_16OCT24.pdf Download PDF
Download Adobe Acrobat Reader
Date Uploaded: 03/09/2026
Date Modified: 03/09/2026

As I have previously shown, Alexandre Brongniart established a coherent science of ceramics. By the mid-nineteenth century, Brongniart had popularised the term "la céramique" as a widely-applicable name for the field of pottery and porcelain making, and other related arts. In the Twentieth Century, ceramic manufacturing became increasingly technical. The inclusive field of artisans and industrialists that Brongniart had once envisioned was fracturing. Voices called for the separation of pottery making from experimental, industrial ceramics and the meaning of the term “ceramics” was hotly debated. Numerous etymologies were traced, but, as the predominant language of science transferred from French to English, none of the twentieth-century authors recognized Brongniart’s key role in the invention of the term. Critically, this language debate coincided with and reflected the global politics, nationalism, and warfare of the first half of the Twentieth Century.

Creator
License
Subject
Geographic Subject
Time Period
  • 20th Century
  • 19th Century
Submitter
College
Department
Date Created
Publisher
Language

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Identifier: doi:10.7945/7wra-y312
Link: https://doi.org/10.7945/7wra-y312

This DOI link is the best way for others to cite your work.

Relationships

In Collection:

Items

Permanent link to this page: https://scholar.uc.edu/show/pk02cc35d