Carnalities - Ortega, Mariana; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Carnalities: The Art of Living in Latinidad
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781478031277
ISBN10:1478031271
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:336 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:445 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 54 color illustrations
700
Category:

Carnalities

The Art of Living in Latinidad
 
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Trade Paperback
 
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Short description:

Mariana Ortega presents a phenomenological study of aesthetics grounded in the work of Latinx artists, theorizing that photography is an affective medium crucial for processes of self-formation, resistance, and mourning in Latinx life.

Long description:
In Carnalities, Mariana Ortega presents a phenomenological study of aesthetics grounded in the work of primarily Latinx artists. She introduces the idea of carnal aesthetics informed by carnalities, creative practices shaped by the self’s affective attunement to the material, cultural, historical, communal, and spiritual. For Ortega, carnal aesthetics offers a way to think about the affective and bodily experiences of racialized selves. Drawing on Gloria Anzaldúa, Chela Sandoval, José Esteban Muñoz, Alia Al-Saji, Helen Ngo, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Roland Barthes, and others, Ortega examines photographic works on Latinx subjects. She analyzes the photography of Laura Aguilar, Verónica Gabriela Cárdenas, and Susan Meiselas, among others, theorizing photography as a carnal, affective medium that is crucial for processes of self-formation, resistance, and mourning in Latinx life. She ends with an intimate reading of photography through a reflection of her own crossing from Nicaragua to the United States in 1979. Motivated by her experience of loss and exile, Ortega argues for the importance of carnal aesthetics in destabilizing and transforming normative, colonial, and decolonial subjects, imaginaries, and structures.

“This is a remarkable book. Through an analysis of artistic practices and ideas, Mariana Ortega produces a feeling-thinking, or sentir-pensar, of the contemporary conditions of immigrant life, Latinx life, female embodiment, and queer life. By focusing on an aesthetics of the carnal, she explores how art can change our habits of perception to help us see and feel what is before us. This is a book that has a heartbeat.”
Table of Contents:
Preface: Skin of Light  ix
Acknowledgments  xi
Introduction  1
I. Carnal Crossings: Eye and Mouth  27
1. Affected by the Eye: A Prelude to a Carnal Aesthetics  29
2. To Be a Mouth: Anzalduan Carnalities  56
3. Spilling Herself in Trees: Autoarte and Laura Aguilar’s Queer Erotics  87
II. Border Crossings: Sorrow and Memory  131
4. Sorrow, Aesthetic Unsettlement, and Sonic Rupture in the Mexico-US Borderlands  133
5. Crossing and Feeling Brown: Verónica Gabriela Cárdenas’s Carnal Light  171
6. Something Very Extraordinary: Incandescence and the Wounding Photograph  210
Notes  233
Bibliography  287
Index  309