Radical Intimacy in Contemporary Art - Moscovitch, Keren; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Radical Intimacy in Contemporary Art: Abjection, Revolt, and Objecthood
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9781350298224
ISBN10:13502982211
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages: pages
Size:234x156 mm
Language:English
700
Category:

Radical Intimacy in Contemporary Art

Abjection, Revolt, and Objecthood
 
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Paperback
 
Normal price:

Publisher's listprice:
GBP 28.99
Estimated price in HUF:
14 671 HUF (13 973 HUF + 5% VAT)
Why estimated?
 
Your price:

13 204 (12 576 HUF + 5% VAT )
discount is: 10% (approx 1 467 HUF off)
The discount is only available for 'Alert of Favourite Topics' newsletter recipients.
Click here to subscribe.
 
Availability:

Not yet published.
 
  Piece(s)

 
Long description:
Radical Intimacy in Contemporary Art focuses on practices that operate at the edges of sexuality and its socially sanctioned expressions. Using psychoanalysis and object-oriented feminism, Keren Moscovitch focuses on the work of several contemporary, provocative artists to initiate a dialogue on the role of intimacy in challenging and reimagining ideology.

Moscovitch suggests that intimacy has played an under-appreciated role in the shifting of social and political consciousness. She explores the work of Leigh Ledare, Genesis P-Orridge, Ellen Jong, Barbara DeGenevieve, Joseph Maida and Lorraine O'Grady, who, through their radical practices, engage in such consciousness shifting in elegant, surprising, and provocative ways. Guided by the feminist psychoanalytic canon of Julia Kristeva throughout, as well as being informed by the philosophy of Luce Irigaray and the critical theory of Judith Butler, Moscovitch situates these artists in the emerging lineage of feminist new materialism. She argues that the instability of intimacy leads to radical and performative objecthood in their work that acts as a powerful expression of revolt. Through this line of argumentation, Moscovitch joins a growing group of philosophers exploring object-oriented theories and practices as a new language for a new era. In this era, the hegemony of subjectivity has been toppled, and a new world of human ontology is built creatively, expressively and in the spirit of revolt.
Table of Contents:
List of FiguresAcknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: Intimacy Revolts
Part I: Leigh Ledare: The Subject on Trial
1. Imagining Intimacy
2. A Poetics of Abjection
Part II: Genesis P-Orridge: Radical Sensibility
3. Ritual and Revolt
Part III: Ellen Jong: The Object in Revolt
4. Sex and the Symbolic
5. Object Oriented Intimacy
Part IV: The Politics of Subjects and Objects
6. Postcolonial Intimacy
7. Subjectivity Reclaimed, Reoriented

Coda: Being is heard in the intimate

Notes
Bibliography
Index