The Mummy's Foot and the Big Toe: Feet and Imaginative Promise
By (Author) Alan Krell
Reaktion Books
Reaktion Books
11th June 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Anthropology
301.09
Hardback
192
Width 120mm, Height 200mm
In this quirky and surprising history, Alan Krell addresses the absurd and abject, the banal and the nastily subversive, and the romantic and fetishistic, as he describes the appearance of the foot in literature, photography, art, sport and film. Discover the gothic tales of French writer Theophile Gautier, the disturbing photographs of Jacques-Andre Boiffard and the religious paintings by Giotto, Tintoretto and Caravaggio that exalt the foot. Marvel at the sporting exploits of elite runners such as Abebe Bikila and Zola Budd, and the surprising representation of the foot in films such as The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939) and Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (2003). Presenting new images and ideas of the foot in a tantalizing way, The Mummy's Foot and the Big Toe is for all those with an interest in the humanities, languages, social sciences and anthropology.
Alan Krells observations and commentary are worthy of the array of literature and art he discussescreative, imaginative, incisive. He picks up where notables such as Thophile Gautier, Georges Bataille, and Charlie Chaplin left off, exploring the cultural implications of what we do about feet: from fetishizing them, to binding them, to racing with them shoeless, to perceiving their nakedness as innocence * Professor Richard Shiff, The University of Texas at Austin *
Those with a taste for such things will probably find plenty to enjoy in a book that ranges from the bare foot as symbol of freedom to the foot as etish and fancy, object of desire and of abjection, and vehicle for the comic, the absurd and the empowering in the context of literature, art, sport and film. Krell is not one to shy away from pedal metaphors, aphorisms and puns, so to say that this is a huge task for a stocking-filler of a book is not altogether inappropriate . . . Krell has an eye for the odd, certainly, and there are some fascinating illustrations . . . not many authors would be able to get Zola Budd, Mary Magdalene and Uma Thurman into the same book. * The Spectator *
This book delves into the deeper world of feet . . . Krell seeks to understand the reactions of writers, photographers, artists and normal people to feet through history . . . It is an arcane and sometimes circuitous journey across time, one which reveals some interesting things about our soles and our souls. * The Observer, Sydney *
Alan Krell was recently Associate Professor in Art History at UNSW Art and Design, Sydney, where he worked for over two decades. He now lives in London. His books include Manet and the Painters of Contemporary Life (1996), The Devils Rope: A Cultural History of Barbed Wire (Reaktion, 2002) and Burning Issues: Fire in Art and the Social Imagination (Reaktion, 2011).