Visual Cultures is the first study of the place of visuality and literacy in specific nations around the world, and includes authoritative, insightful essays on the value accorded to the visual and the verbal in Japan, Poland, China, Russia, Ireland and Slovenia. The content is not only analytic, but also historical, tracing changes in the significance of visual and verbal literacy in each nation. Visual Cultures also raises and explores issues of national identity, and provides a wealth of information for future research. Visual Cultures will appeal to those with an interest in visual studies, cultural studies, postcolonial theory, area studies, subaltern studies, political theory, art history and art criticism.
Tabla de materias
Introduction
Slovenia: Visuality and Literarity In Slovene Culture – Andrej Smrekar
Japan: Lost In Translation, or Nothing To See but Everything – Sunil Manghani
Ireland: Words Upon the Windowpane: Image, Text, and Irish Culture – Luke Gibbons
Poland: A Visually-Oriented Literary Culture? – Kris Van Heuckelom
China: Verbal Above Visual: A Chinese Perspective – Ding Ning
Russia: To Read, To Look: Teaching Visual Studies In Moscow – Viktoria Musvik
Critical Response – Esther Sánchez-Pardo
Sobre el autor
James Elkins teaches in the School of the Art Institute, Chicago. A recent book is What Heaven Looks Like, which ponders a mysterious eighteenth-century manuscript as if it were a contemporary artwork. Since Chinese Landscape Painting as Western Art History, he has been at work on an experimental novel – something that takes longer than a monograph to complete.
Contact: School of the Art Institute of Chicago, 36 S Wabash Ave, Chicago, IL 60603, USA.