Narcissus in Bloom: An Alternative History of the Selfie
By (Author) Matt Colquhoun
Watkins Media Limited
Repeater Books
12th September 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Philosophy: aesthetics
Photography: portraits and self-portraiture
155.2
Paperback
1
Width 130mm, Height 197mm
369g
Narcissism is the defining pathology of the twenty-first century, but what if it is not self-obsession that defines us but a need for self-transformation Narcissus in Bloom is a short history of the self-portrait, beginning with Renaissance painters like Albrecht D rer, Rembrandt and Caravaggio, through to photographers and celebrities like Paris Hilton and Kim Kardashian, Lee Friedlander and Herve Guibert. Analysing the ways that so many artists have regarded their own image, how might the age of the selfie be considered as a time of transformation rather than stasis By returning to the original tale of Narcissus, and the flower from which he takes his name, this book offers an alternative reading of narcissism from within the midst of a moralising subgenre of books that argue our self-obsession will be the death of us. That may be so. But what will we become after we have taken the watery track, and rid ourselves of the cloistered self-image given to us by late capitalism
Narcissus in Bloomis a real achievement ... it marks a return to a now lost tradition: big-picture cultural theorising that speaks to and illuminates present-day anxieties in unexpected ways, spoken in the vernacular of contemporary popular culture, of the likes of Richard Hoggart, Raymond Williams, Stuart Hall and more.
"Relating one's emotional self to those around us is at the very heart of Colquhoun's queer critical and political project. Narcissus in Bloom is ambitious, moving, inspirational and loving... a purposeful and universal work driven by the author's passion for photography."
"Rather than see the selfie as a sign of self-absorption, this engrossing volume understands the selfie as expressing a longing for a kind of self-transformation. Elegantly and stylishly written, this book is the best kind of cultural criticism, sweeping away the worn- out cliches of the familiar for the freshness and wonder of the truly new.
Matt Colquhoun is a writer and photographer from Hull, UK. He is the author of Egress- On Mourning, Melancholy and Mark Fisher (2020) and the editor of Mark Fisher's Postcapitalist Desire- The Final Lectures (2021). He is currently based in Newcastle upon Tyne and blogs at xenogothic.com.