|
Date: Saturday, 14 Jan 2012, 2:13 AM | Message # 1 : |
|
|
|
|
Messages: 180
|
|
Likes & Hates:[1] |
Reproofs:
|
Respect
[ ]
|
Offline
|
|
"The New Art History: A Critical Introduction" by Jonathan Harris
Rоutledge, Tауlоr & Frаnсis Group | 2001 | ISBN: 041523008X 0203775023 0415230071 9780415230070 9780415230087 | 322 pages | PDF | 2 MB
This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the fundamental changes which have occurred in both the institutions and practice of art history over the last thirty years. Jonathan Harris examines and accounts for the new approaches to the study of art which have been grouped loosely under the term "the new art history." Structured around an examination of key texts by major contemporary critics, including Griselda Pollock, Fred Orton, Albert Boime, Alan Wallach and Laura Mulvey, each chapter discusses a key moment in the discipline of art history, tracing the development and interaction of Marxist, feminist and psychoanalytic critical theories.
Author distinguishes between these and earlier forms of "radical" or "critical" analysis, explores the influence of other disciplines and traditions on art history, and relates art historical ideas and values to social change. Individual chapters include: Capitalist Modernity, the Nation-State and Visual Representation; Feminism, Art, and ArtHistory; Subjects, Identities and Visual Ideology; Structures and Meanings in Art and Society; and The Representation of Sexuality.
Contents List of illustrations Acknowledgements Introduction Aims and readers New, critical, radical, social Terms and texts Readings, meanings, values, and politics Art history, radical art history, and real history 1 Radical art history: back to its future? Prejudices, perspectives, and principles For ‘new’ read ‘old’? Politics, modernity, and radical art history Structure, agency, and art 2 Capitalist modernity, the nation-state, and visual representation ‘. . . no art history apart from other kinds of history’ Elements within ‘the social history of art’ Institutions and ideologies Meanings and materialism 3 Feminism, art, and art history Politics, position, perspective Greatness, creativity, and cultural value Ideologies, sexual difference, and social change Modernism, modernity, and feminist art history in the 1990s 4 Subjects, identities, and visual ideology Psychoanalysis and radical politics after the 1960s Self, sex, society, and culture Psychoanalysis and systems of signification Sight, social ordering, and subjectivity 5 Structures and meanings in art and society Signs, discourse, and society Marks and meanings Making and masking the ‘real’ Perception, narration, and ‘visual culture’ 6 Searching, after certainties Beyond subjects and structures Signs, surfaces, and civilisation Politics, culture, and post-modernism Cultivating nature 7 Sexualities represented Matter and materialism Semantic/somatic: Charles Demuth and Rosa Bonheur Body heat The matter of ideals Conclusion: the means and ends of radical art history Radicalism in art history and ‘identity-politics’ Race and representation Somatic/aesthetic/exotic: bodies and blackness ‘Arguments and values’, not ‘theories and methods’ Notes Select bibliography Index Code http://www.filesonic.com/file/D4SOoI8/c92.pdf
|
|
|
|