The Rape of the Masters et plus d'un million d'autres livres sont disponibles pour le Kindle d'Amazon. En savoir plus


ou
Identifiez-vous pour activer la commande 1-Click.
ou
en essayant gratuitement Amazon Premium pendant un mois. Votre inscription aura lieu lors du passage de la commande. En savoir plus.
Plus de choix
Vous l'avez déjà ? Vendez votre exemplaire ici
The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art
 
Agrandissez cette image
 
Commencer à lire The Rape of the Masters sur votre Kindle en moins d'une minute .

Vous n'avez pas encore de Kindle ? Achetez-le ici ou téléchargez une application de lecture gratuite.

The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art [Anglais] [Relié]

Roger Kimball

Prix : EUR 20,19 LIVRAISON GRATUITE En savoir plus.
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
En stock.
Expédié et vendu par Amazon.fr. Emballage cadeau disponible.
Plus que 1 ex (réapprovisionnement en cours). Commandez vite !
Voulez-vous le faire livrer le vendredi 1 juin ? Choisissez la livraison en 1 jour ouvré sur votre bon de commande. En savoir plus.
‹  Retourner à l'aperçu du produit

Descriptions du produit

Philippe de Montebello, Director, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Roger Kimball's brilliant book sets out to repair the damage inflicted on art history...in short, a restoration project.

Book Description

Colleges and universities used to teach art history to encourage connoisseurship and acquaint students with the riches of our artistic heritage. But now, as Roger Kimball reveals in this witty and provocative book, the student is less likely to learn about the aesthetics of masterworks than to be told, for instance, that Peter Paul Rubens' great painting Drunken Silenus is an allegory about anal rape. Or that Courbet's famous hunting pictures are psychodramas about "castration anxiety." Or that Gauguin's Manao tupapau is an example of the way repression is "written on the bodies of women." Or that Jan van Eyck's masterful Arnolfini Portrait is about "middle-class deceptions ... and the treatment of women." Or that Mark Rothko's abstract White Band (Number 27) "parallels the pictorial structure of a pieta." Or that Winslow Homer's The Gulf Stream is "a visual encoding of racism."

In "The Rape of the Masters: How Political Correctness Sabotages Art," Kimball, a noted art critic himself, shows how academic art history is increasingly held hostage to radical cultural politics--feminism, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, the whole armory of academic antihumanism. To make his point, he describes how eight famous works of art (reprinted here as illustrations) have been made over to fit a radical ideological fantasy. Kimball then performs a series of intellectual rescue operations, explaining how these great works should be understood through a series of illuminating readings in which art, not politics, guides the discussion.

"The Rape of the Masters" exposes the charlatanry that fuels much academic art history and leaks into the art world generally, affecting galleries, museums and catalogues. It also provides an engaging antidote to the tendentious, politically motivated assaults on our treasured sources of culture and civilization.

About the author

Roger Kimball is the author of "Tenured Radicals," "The Long March" and "Art's Prospect: The Challenge of Tradition in an Age of Celebrity." He is managing editor of the "New Criterion."
‹  Retourner à l'aperçu du produit

Déclaration de confidentialité Amazon.fr Informations sur la livraison Amazon.fr Retours & Echanges Amazon.fr