Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | N 71 .D44 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5123252 |
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N 70 .K45 1944 Language of vision, | N 70 .M336 1978 The voices of silence / | N 71 Art and intention : a philosophical study / | N 71 .D44 2014 Deleuze and the schizoanalysis of visual art / | N 71 .J68 2013 After art / | N 71 .K78 2014 Creative block : discover new ideas, advice and projects from 50 successful artists / | N 71 .M285 2014 The psychology of visual art : eye, brain and art / |
"Schizoanalysis is Deleuze and Guattari's fusion of psychoanalytic-inspired theories of the self, the libido and desire with Marx-inspired theories of the economy, history and society. Schizoanalysis holds that art's function is both political and aesthetic - it changes perception. If one cannot change perception, then, one cannot change anything politically. This is why Deleuze and Guattari always insist that the artists operate at the level of the real (not the imaginary or the symbolic). Ultimately, they argue, there is no necessary distinction to be made between aesthetics and politics. One is simply the flipside of the other because both concern the formation and transformation of social and cultural norms. Deleuze and the Schizoanalysis of Visual Art explores how every artist, good or bad, contributes to the structure and nature of society because their work either reinforces social norms, or challenges them. On this view of things, we are all artists, we all have the potential to exercise what might be called a 'aesthetico-political function' and change the world around us; or, just as easily, we can dwell like assassins, and not only let the status quo endure but fight to preserve it as though it were freedom itself"-- Provided by publisher.
Machine generated contents note: -- Notes on ContributorsList of IllustrationsIntroduction, Ian Buchanan and Lorna CollinsPart I: Genealogy of Art and Schizoanalysis1. The Clutter Assemblage, Ian Buchanan (Director for the Institute for Social Transformation Research, University of Wollongong, Australia)2. Schizo-Revolutionary Art; Deleuze, Guattari and Communisation Theory, Stephen Zepke (author of Sublime Art)Part II: Raw Data for Schizoanalysis: Outsider Art3. Pragmatics of Raw Art (For the Post-Autonomy Paradigm), Alexander Wilson (media artist, musician, theatre director and theorist)4. Passional Bodies: The Interstitial Force of Artaud's Drawings, Anna Powell (Reader in Film and English at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)5. Art, Therapy and the Schizophrenic, Lorna Collins (artist, poet and critical theorist)Part III: Art as an Abstract Machine6. The Audience and the Art Machine: Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller's Opera for a Small Room, Susan Ballard (School of the Arts, English and Media, University of Wollongong)7. 1780 and 1945: An Avant-Garde Without Authority, Addressing the Anthropocene, jan jagodzinski (University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada)8. Strategies of Camouflage: Depersonalisation, Schizoanalysis and Contemporary Photography, Ayelet Zohar (transdisciplinary artist, curator and Lecturer, Tel Aviv University, Israel)Part IV: Mobilizing Schizoanalysis: Collaborative Art Practice 9. The Event of Painting, Andrea Eckersley (artist)10. In Response to the 'Indiscreet Questioner', Jac Saorsa (Cardiff University, Wales)11. The Sinthome/Z-point Relation or Art as Non-Schizoanalysis, David Burrows and Simon O'Sullivan (Plastique Fantastique) (Slade School of Fine Art, UCL, UK and Goldsmiths College, University of London)12. Art as Schizoanalysis: Creative Place-Making in South Asia, Leon Tan (Independent scholar)Index.
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