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Anxiety Aesthetics: Maoist Legacies in China, 19781985 [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x13 mm, weight: 590 g, 31 color illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Feb-2024
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520393783
  • ISBN-13: 9780520393783
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 208 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 254x178x13 mm, weight: 590 g, 31 color illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Feb-2024
  • Leidėjas: University of California Press
  • ISBN-10: 0520393783
  • ISBN-13: 9780520393783
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Anxiety Aesthetics is the first book to consider a prehistory of contemporaneity in China through the emergent creative practices in the aftermath of the Mao era. Arguing that socialist residues underwrite contemporary Chinese art, complicating its theorization through Maoism, Jennifer Dorothy Lee traces a selection of historical events and controversies in late 1970s and early 1980s Beijing. Lee offers a fresh critical frame for doing symptomatic readings of protest ephemera and artistic interventions in the Beijing Spring social movement of 1978–80, while exploring the rhetoric of heated debates waged in institutional contexts prior to the '85 New Wave. Lee demonstrates how socialist aesthetic theories and structures continued to shape young artists' engagement with both space and selfhood and occupied the minds of figures looking to reform the nation. In magnifying this fleeting moment, Lee provides a new historical foundation for the unprecedented global exposure of contemporary Chinese art today.

Recenzijos

"Against conventional historiography of post-Reform Chinese art and with painstaking detail and analytical virtuosity, Jennifer Dorothy Lees Anxiety Aesthetics conceptualizes how artists and intellectuals both repudiated and continued the revolutionary legacies of Maoism in their works." * Positions Politics * Anxiety Aesthetics is a beautifully crafted work of inspired scholarship. Cogently argued and a pleasure to read. . . . Anyone working on the cultural production of 1980s China writ large will find something of interest here. Indeed, insofar as Lee positions her research in relation to a crisis of socialism, one hopes the book will find an audience among scholars of comparative socialisms more broadly. * Chinese Studies International *

Jennifer Dorothy Lee is Associate Professor of East Asian Art in the Department of Art History, Theory, and Criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.