Visual Analogy: Consciousness as the Art of Connecting
By (Author) Barbara Maria Stafford
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
24th August 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Theory of art
Cognition and cognitive psychology
Phenomenology and Existentialism
700.1
Paperback
240
Width 178mm, Height 229mm, Spine 13mm
517g
Recuperating a topic once central to philosophy, theology, rhetoric and aesthetics, this groundbreaking book explores the discovery of sameness in otherness. Analogy poses an intriguing ancient and modern conundrum. How, in the face of cultural diversity, can a unique someone or something be perceived as like what it is not This book is for anyone puzzled by why today, as Barbara Maria Stafford claims, "we possess no language for talking about resemblance, only an exaggerated awareness of difference". Well-designed images, Stafford argues, reveal the mind's intuitive leaps to connect known with unknown experience. The first of four wide-ranging chapters paints a challenging overview of several pressing contemporary issues. Cloning, legal controversies about social inequity, identity politics, electronic copying, and the mimicry of virtual reality expose the need for a nuanced theory of similitude. The second examines the historical tug-of-war between analogy and allegory, or "disanalogy". Stafford provocatively suggests that, since the Romantic era, we have been living in polarizingly allegorical times. The third roots this divisiveness within the momentous shift from a magical universe, modelled on sexual bounds, to an engineered world built of discrete automated units. Finally, recent developments in computational brain research notwithstanding, major phenomenological questions about memory, emotion, intelligence and awareness beckon. In the fourth chapter, Stafford intervenes in the consciousness debates to propose a humanistic cognitive science with bridging/analogy at its artful core.
"This book has many virtues, especially the timeliness of its critique of differential thinking, its marvelous range of examples from visual art, and Stafford's supple intricacy with abstract language." - Charles Altieri, Modernism
Barbara Maria Stafford is the William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor of Art History at the University of Chicago. She is the author of Good Looking, Artful Science, Body Criticism, and Voyage into Substance (all published by MIT Press) and Symbol and Myth: Humbert de Superville's Essay on Absolute Signs in Art.