633 resultados para Kathy


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What role does Australia play in debates over the regulation and governance of the Internet? Is it a hub? A node in the information grid? Or is it a mere cul–de–sac? Or are we mere road–kill, bush junk, on the information autobahn?

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The dissertation analyzes and elaborates upon the changing map of U.S. ethno-racial formation from the vantage point of North American Studies, multi-disciplinary cultural studies, and the criticism of visual culture. The focus is on four contemporary Mexican American (Chicana) women photographers, whose art production is discussed, on the one hand, in the context of the Euro-American history of photographic genres and, on the other hand, in the context of so-called decolonizing cultural and academic discourses produced by Mexican Americans themselves. The manuscript consists of two parts. Part I outlines the theoretical and methodological domain of the study, positioning it in the interstices of American studies, European postmodern criticism, postcolonial feminist theory, and the theories of visual culture, particularly of art photography. In addition, the main issues and paradigms of Chicano Studies (Mexican American ethnic studies) are introduced. Part II consists of seven essays, each of which discusses rather independently a particular photographic work or a series of photographs, formulating and defending arguments about their meaning, position in the history of photographic genres, and their cultural and socio-political significance. The study closes with a discussion about ethno-racial identity formation and the role of Chicana photography therein - in embodying and reproducing new subjectivities, alternative categories of knowledge, and open ended historical narratives. It is argued that, symbolically, the "Wild Zone" of gendered and race-specific knowledge becomes associated with the body of the mother, a recurrent image in Chicana art works under discussion. Embedded in this image, the construction of an alternative notion of a family thus articulates the parameters of a matrifocal ethno-racial community unified by the proliferation of differences rather than by conformities typical of nationalistic ideologies. While focusing on art photography, the study as a whole simultaneously constructs, from a European vantage point, a "thick" description of Mexican American history, identities, communities, cultural practices, and self-representations about which very little is known in Finland.

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In 1989, the American visual artist Cindy Sherman produced her ‘Sex Pictures’, a number of photographic images of two medical mannequins whose bodies had been dismembered and reconstructed to form abstract configurations that alluded to pornographic poses. Sherman's series was a response to the National Endowment for the Arts controversy, in which American artists such as Andres Serrano and the late Robert Mapplethorpe, whose work was considered obscene by the Republican Congress, were censored. Many artists in the culture-war period had their grants rescinded. The American avant-garde writer Kathy Acker published My Mother: Demonology in 1993. A prominent concern of Acker's in the work is what she termed her ‘writing freedom’ in a climate of cultural expurgation by the Republican elite. In particular, Acker was worried that she was ‘internalizing certain censorships’. This article addresses Sherman's and Acker's work in a comparative context to explore, through the theoretical work of Julia Kristeva, the ways in which their responses to a climate of political censorship can be read as forms of intimate revolt. Kristeva's notion of ejection—the act of placing something beyond the scope of the possible—transpires as ‘a condition of art's creation’ in Sherman's and Acker's work. Acker and Sherman use the pornographic reference in their work to disrupt and dislocate the narrative and image from convention in order to de-eroticize the body, against heteronormativity's terms, and empower the female sex organs. Eversion—that is, in Sherman's and Acker's works, the act of turning the institutional and maternal body inside out—emerges as a mode of resistance to the danger of the writer and the artist internalizing cultural restrictions. The everted body creates a site of radical interiority which becomes the (impossible) site for the radical (re-)embodiment of the feminine subject.

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Il mio lavoro di tesi si intitola "Alla ricerca dell'autenticità. Kathy Acker e Vladimir Sorokin a confronto". La comparazione riflette sulle inaspettate similarità sociali, e di conseguenza letterarie, di Usa e Urss dagli anni Settanta agli anni Novanta, indagate attraverso l'arte dei due scrittori citati nel titolo.  Kathy Acker è nata nel 1947 a New York e durante gli anni Settanta frequentò assiduamente la comunità artistica definita "Downtown New York". Vladimir Sorokin è nato nel 1955 nei dintorni di Mosca e negli stessi anni entrò all'intorno del circolo "Moskovskij Konzeptualism" della grande città. Queste due comunità artistiche erano create dalla libera aggregazione di artisti, scultori, letterati, poeti, musicisti.. in un vortice creativo in contrasto con la chiusura sociale e artistica degli ambiti definibili come accademici o ufficiali.  Con le loro opere Acker e Sorokin cercarono di distruggere le norme sovraimposte e arrivare all'"autenticità" riguardo al sé, all'homo sovieticus, all'uomo americano e riguardo al genere umano in generale.  Nell'arco del mio studio l'utopia del radioso avvenire sovietico e l'utopia del sogno americano d'oltreoceano si sono rivelati come prigioni della vita di ogni giorno, in grado di allontanare l'uomo dai suoi desideri veri e dai suoi impulsi più umani. Le risposte artistiche delle due comunità in generale e dei due scrittori in particolare sono volte alla liberazione dai vincoli dell'utopia e alla riscoperta di ciò che è ritenuto come debolezza e bassezza dell'uomo. Le due comunità artistiche cercarono il contatto con un vasto pubblico non elitario, cercano un linguaggio comprensibile da tutti. Contemporaneamente il corpo con tutte le sue pulsioni cerca di riguadagnare il proprio spazio in un sè egemonizzato dalla mente. Ma quel che queste comunità artistiche soprattutto fanno è porre domande alla coscienza e incoscienza della società. Cercano di trasformare il terrore quotidiano in qualcosa di comprensibile e scaricabile, un ruolo che una volta era proprio dei rituali trasgressivi del popolo e che dal Novecento, con la trasformazione del popolo in massa omologata, sono venuti a mancare. Acker e Sorokin cercano strutture narrative e artistiche in grado di proporre alla “corporealtà collettiva” una via di redenzione ritualistica. Questi artisti non si conformano e sono in grado di illuminare, di dare sostentamento all'individuo nella ricerca personale di una lingua, di un pensiero, di un mito in cui vivere. Reagiscono al balbettio omologante delle società di massa, non si adeguano a nessuna forma fissa e anche la loro arte continua a evolvere, a fallire, a cercare.

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