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The Justice of Visual Art Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)

The Justice of Visual Art By Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)

The Justice of Visual Art by Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)


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Summary

Provides unique insight into debates in the field of human rights around how to address violent and traumatic pasts, reconcile divided nations, and strengthen state institutions in the aftermath of conflict; making it of interest to policy-makers, practitioners, and scholars of transitional justice, International Relations, and art theory.

The Justice of Visual Art Summary

The Justice of Visual Art: Creative State-Building in Times of Political Transition by Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)

In the aftermath of mass conflict how is it possible to address violent and traumatic pasts, reconcile divided nations, and strengthen state institutions? This study explores the connections between transitional justice and visual art in order to answer that question. Garnsey argues that art can engage and shape ideas of justice. Art can be an inquiry into, and an alternative experience of, justice. Art embeds justice on different political levels - both local and global. Art becomes a radical form of political participation in times of transition. Arising out of extensive fieldwork at the Constitutional Court of South Africa and the South Africa Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, which included 130 interviews with key decision makers, the book provides the first substantive theoretical framework for understanding transitional justice and visual art, and develops novel conceptions of visual jurisprudence and cultural diplomacy as forms of transitional justice.

The Justice of Visual Art Reviews

In this pioneering interdisciplinary book, Eliza Garnsey offers a compelling account of the complex and productive relationship between visual art and transitional justice. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in the South African Constitutional Court and at the Venice Biennale, she shows both how the South African state has attempted to mobilise art as an instrument of cultural diplomacy and how art often escapes efforts to harness it, instead opening up new dimensions of experience and novel sources of political and ethical insight. Duncan Bell, University of Cambridge
Firmly rooted in interdisciplinary ground,The Justice of Visual Artoffers an exciting and refreshing contribution to ongoing conversations about the roleof art in difficult processes of dealing with the past. Garnsey's concept of 'visual jurisprudence' opens a new vista on the complex relationship betweenlegal institutions and the cultural background against which they function. This is a must-read for all students of transitional justice and the politics ofmemory. Mihaela Mihai, University of Edinburgh
Writing in the wake of debates on visual and aesthetic politics, Garnsey offers a meticulously researched and highly compelling account of how art shapes cultural diplomacy and transitional justice in South Africa. Roland Bleiker, University of Queensland
After the guns have been put aside, the arduous and prolonged business of reconciliation and social reconstruction in post-conflict societies cant be left entirely to the courts.Garnsey develops a novel understanding of visual jurisprudence as she argues persuasively that the arts have an essential part to play, using two finely crafted case studies. Charles Jones, University of Cambridge
This innovative study contributes to our understanding of the role of art in post-TRC South Africa. By considering deeply state-supported art as more than symbolic reparations and, rather, as visual jurisprudence and as creative state-building, Garnsey makes a strong case for art as foundational to the reconception of the justice system within the country and to the exhibition of contested narratives of the 'new' South Africa to the outside world. Cynthia E. Milton, Universite de Montreal
This book makes an important and timely intervention into a burgeoning debate about the relationship of art to transitional justice. Garnsey, rather than focusing on the instrumental potential of art to foster goals of transitional justice, draws our attention to the potential of art to help us make better sense of its core ideas and messy reality. Art allows for expression and contestation, experimentation and creativity; it is 'a radical form of political participation in times of transition'. Rachel Kerr, Kings College London
'A beautifully curated book concerned with the need to better understand the relationship between art and justice in times of transition.' BISA L.H.M. Ling Outstanding First Book Prize committee, awarding an Honourable Mention.

About Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)

Eliza Garnsey is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow in International Relations at the University of Cambridge and is Junior Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Cambridge. She was previously awarded the 2017 Lisa Smirl Ph.D. Prize for best thesis in Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Art and justice in times of transition; Part I. Recognising Transitional Justice in the Nation State: 3. From prison to court; 4. Shaping 'legal' space; 5. The art of recognition; 6. The visual jurisprudence of transition; Part II. Representing Transitional Justice on the Global Stage: 7. From banned to embraced; 8. Mapping political art-scapes; 9. The art of representation; 10. The cultural diplomacy of Imaginary Fact; 11. Conclusion.

Additional information

NPB9781108494397
9781108494397
1108494390
The Justice of Visual Art: Creative State-Building in Times of Political Transition by Eliza Garnsey (University of Cambridge)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2019-11-07
246
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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