After-Affects | After-Images: Trauma and Aesthetic Transformation in the Virtual Feminist Museum
By (Author) Griselda Pollock
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
3rd September 2013
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
704.949155937
Paperback
416
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
In closely-read case studies, we encounter artworks by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Ana Mendieta, Louise Bourgeois, Alina Szapocznikow, Anna Maria Maiolino, Vera Frenkel, Sarah Kofman and Chantal Akerman to explore trauma and bereavement, fatal illness, Holocaust experience, migration, exile and the encounter with political horror and atrocity. -- .
In Griselda Pollocks brilliantly-staged encounters between contemporary art and psychoanalysis, the aesthetic emerges as the space in which we can be responsive to the traces of trauma and live with its after-effects. Through incisive and carefully-articulated theoretical insights and reparative acts of close reading, Pollock offers us new ways of thinking about painful aftermaths as well as a new vocabulary for feminist visual studies.
Marianne Hirsch, William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature in the Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality at Columbia University
In this powerful latest book, Griselda Pollock brings her writing on her key concept of `the virtual feminist museum to a new phase. What are the legacies of trauma in visual space How might they be gendered And is there a psychic realm to which women are closer that allows for a generative creativity equal to the horrors of our times Once again, the meticulous, detailed respect she shows towards her chosen women artists is matched by a sustained theoretical scrutiny, both of which have become the hallmark of her unique feminist intervention into our understanding of images.
Jacqueline Rose, Professor of English at Queen Mary, University of London
Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of the Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History at the University of Leeds. Author and editor of over 25 books and numerous articles on postcolonial, international feminist and cultural studies in the visual arts and film. With Catherine de Zegher, she co-edited Bracha L Ettinger: Art as Compassion (2011) and with Max Silverman Concentrationary Cinema: Aesthetics as Resistance in Alain Resnaiss Night and Fog (2011) and Concentrationary Memories (2013). She is also editor of Visual Politics and Psychoanalysis: Art and the Image in Post-traumatic Culture (2013). Her forthcoming work includes a monograph on Charlotte Salomons Life Or Theatre and Art in the Time-Space of Memory and Migration: Sigmund Freud, Anna Freud Bracha Ettinger in the Freud Museum