front cover of The Queer Aesthetics of Childhood
The Queer Aesthetics of Childhood
Asymmetries of Innocence and the Cultural Politics of Child Development
Hannah Dyer
Rutgers University Press, 2020
2020 Choice​ Outstanding Academic Title

In The Queer Aesthetics of Childhood, Hannah Dyer offers a study of how children’s art and art about childhood can forecast new models of social life that redistribute care, belonging, and political value. Dyer suggests that childhood’s cultural expressions offer insight into the persisting residues of colonial history, nation building, homophobia, and related violence. Drawing from queer and feminist theory, psychoanalysis, settler-colonial studies, and cultural studies, this book helps to explain how some theories of childhood can hurt children. Dyer’s analysis moves between diverse sites and scales, including photographs and an art installation, children’s drawings after experiencing war in Gaza, a novel about gay love and childhood trauma, and debates in sex-education. In the cultural formations of art, she finds new theories of childhood that attend to the knowledge, trauma, fortitude and experience that children might possess. In addressing aggressions against children, ambivalences towards child protection, and the vital contributions children make to transnational politics, she seeks new and queer theories of childhood.
 
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front cover of Qu’est-ce que l’art contemporain ?
Qu’est-ce que l’art contemporain ?
Alexander García Düttmann
Diaphanes, 2019
Il est difficile de concevoir un art qui soit aussi étroitement lié à son présent que ne l’est l’art contemporain. En effet, l’art contemporain est issu d’une rupture inouïe avec les pratiques artistiques du passé. Il semble prendre son point de départ dans une profonde amnésie par rapport à ce qui le précède. Les distinctions esthétiques traditionnelles, entre forme et contenu, autonomie et hétéronomie, ou oeuvre et critique, ne sont plus pertinentes quand il s’agit de cet art. Mais qu’est-ce qu’alors que l’art contemporain? Cette question a pu être posée par l’historien, le théoricien, voire le sociologue de l’art. Mais elle n’a pas encore été soulevée comme question philosophique – comme question qui cherche à établir l’essence de l’art contemporain. La réponse donnée, dans ce livre, à ladite question est double. D’une part, elle est positive: dans son essence, l’art contemporain est la fiction d’un pur faire. D’autre part, elle est négative: l’art contemporain est le site où se révèle comme nulle part ailleurs l’idéologie politique du capitalisme néolibéral.
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front cover of Quoting Caravaggio
Quoting Caravaggio
Contemporary Art, Preposterous History
Mieke Bal
University of Chicago Press, 1999
As period, as style, as sensibility, the Baroque remains elusive, its definition subject to dispute. Perhaps this is so in part because baroque vision resists separation of mind and body, form and matter, line and color, image and discourse. In Quoting Caravaggio, Mieke Bal deploys this insight of entanglement as a form of art analysis, exploring its consequences for both contemporary and historical art, as well as for current conceptions of history.

Mieke Bal’s primary object of investigation in Quoting Caravaggio is not the great seventeenth-century painter, but rather the issue of temporality in art. In order to retheorize linear notions of influence in cultural production, Bal analyzes the productive relationship between Caravaggio and a number of late-twentieth-century artists who "quote" the baroque master in their own works. These artists include Andres Serrano, Carrie Mae Weems, Ken Aptekar, David Reed, and Ana Mendieta, among others. Each chapter of Quoting Caravaggio shows particular ways in which quotation is vital to the new art but also to the source from which it is derived. Through such dialogue between present and past, Bal argues for a notion of "preposterous history" where works that appear chronologically first operate as an aftereffect caused by the images of subsequent artists.

Quoting Caravaggio is a rigorous, rewarding work: it is at once a meditation on history as creative, nonlinear process; a study of the work of Caravaggio and the Baroque; and, not least, a brilliant critical exposition of contemporary artistic representation and practice.


"[A] profoundly enlivening exercise in art criticism, in which the lens of theory magnifies rather than diminishes its object. . . . [A] remarkable book. . . . The power of Quoting Caravaggio resides in the intelligence and authority of the writer."—Roger Malbert, Times Literary Supplement
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