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Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art Rachel Warriner

Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art By Rachel Warriner

Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art by Rachel Warriner


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Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art Summary

Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art: Activism in the Work of Nancy Spero by Rachel Warriner

Between 1966 and 1976, American artist Nancy Spero completed some of her most aggressively political work. Made at a time when Spero was a key member of the anti-war and feminist arts-activism that burgeoned in the New York art world during the period, her works demonstrate a violent and bodily rejection of injustice. Considering the ways in which anti-war and feminist art used emotion as a means to persuade and protest, Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art examines the history of this crucial decade in American art politics through close attention to Speros practice. Situating her work amongst the activism that defined the era, this book examines the ways in which sensation and emotion became political weapons for a generation of artists seeking to oppose patriarchy and war. Exemplary of the way in which artists were using metaphors of sensation and emotion in their work as part of the anti-Vietnam war and feminist art movements in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Speros practice acts as a model for representing how politics feels. By exploring Spero's political engagement anew, this book offer a profound recontextualization of the important contribution that Spero made to Feminist thought, politics and art in the US.

Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art Reviews

Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art is a timely account of the aesthetics and ethics of pain as a physical, social, and psychic force. Warriners richly contextual analysis presents a compelling new picture of the work of Spero and of pain as a crucial subject and strategy for feminist and anti-war art and activism. * Lucy Bradnock, Reader in Modern and Contemporary Art and Vice-Dean for Research, The Courtauld Institute of Art, UK *
Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art not only offers a fresh take on the work of Nancy Spero, but a methodological intervention in the study of political art. The focus on pain offers a framework for understanding empathy, representation and affect, while Warriner's close attention to the psychic, the embodied and the social give much needed nuance to the feminist refrain the "personal is political". * Amy Tobin, Assistant Professor, History of Art, University of Cambridge, UK *

About Rachel Warriner

Rachel Warriner is British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the Courtauld Institute of Art, UK, where her research focuses on the important contribution of activist collectives to the American feminist art movement during the 1970s. She has published widely on feminist art and poetry.

Table of Contents

List of Plates List of Figures Acknowledgments Introduction Pain and its Politics Pains Metaphor and Metonymy Chapter Outline Chapter One: Personal and Political: Pain and Emotion 1966-1976 Anti-War Anger and Feminist Hurt Pain 1966-76 Chapter Two: The Suffering of War and the Pain of Alienation Fantasy, the Beast, and Herman Kahn: metaphors and metonymy of war From Symbols of War to the Fractured Symbolic Chapter Three: Codex Artaud: Hysteria and Silence Picturing Silence Hysteria and the Politics of Pain The American Woman Artist Show, GEDOK and the Amerika Haus Chapter Four: Torture of Women as devotional object. Unreliable Witness Torture and Information in the 1970s: Feeling the Pain of Others. Affective meditation and beholding: medieval modes for feminism Conclusion Notes Index

Additional information

NPB9781788312608
9781788312608
1788312600
Pain and Politics in Postwar Feminist Art: Activism in the Work of Nancy Spero by Rachel Warriner
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2023-02-23
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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