[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] New Book: Sensible Politics: The Visual Cultures of Nongovernmental Activism
Wed Sep 26 09:29:50 GMT 2012
Zone Books is pleased to announce the publication of /Sensible Politics:
The Visual Culture of Nongovernmental Activism/, edited by Meg Mclagan
and Yates Mckee.
Political acts are encoded in medial forms---feet marching on a street,
punch holes on a card, images on live stream, tweets---that have force,
shaping people as subjects and constituting the contours of what is
sensible, legible, visible. Thus, these events define the terms of
political possibility and create terrain for political actions.
Sensible Politics: The Visual Culture of Nongovernmental Activism
considers the constitutive role played by aesthetic and performative
techniques in the staging of claims by nongovernmental activists.
Attending to political aesthetics means focusing not on a disembodied
image that travels under the concept of art or visual culture, nor on a
preformed domain of the political that seeks subsequent expression in
medial form. Instead, it requires bringing the two realms together into
the same analytic frame. Drawing on the work of a diverse group of
contributors, from art historians, anthropologists, and political
theorists to artists, filmmakers, and architects, Sensible Politics
situates aesthetic forms within broader activist contexts and networks
of circulation and in so doing offers critical insight into the
practices of mediation whereby the political becomes manifest.
"Photographs, maps, videos, reports, charts, spaces, and
bodies---these and many other material things assemble into what the
editors of this remarkable volume call an 'image-complex' that
conditions how we know what we know, and what we do with that knowledge.
Sensible Politics is a practical, theoretical guide for thinking and
acting in the aesthetico-political register that puts art and politics
together with rigor, imagination, and urgency. For anyone concerned
with these matters, this is not just an interesting book, or a useful
book. It is a necessary book."
---Reinhold Martin, author of /Utopia's Ghost: Architecture and
Postmodernism, Again/
Sensible Politics "seeks to attend to the dispersion of aesthetics
across the multiple institutional and discursive networks and platforms
that constitute political action in the present. And so it does!
Sensible Politics confounds our current divisions of the aesthetic and
the political and challenges scholars and activists---scholaractivists
and activistscholars---to rethink the political potential of images as
they are absorbed by the concrete apparatuses of contemporary regimes of
governmentality."
---Elizabeth A. Povinelli, author of /Economies of Abandonment: Social
Belonging and Endurance in Late Liberalism/
*For more information or to purchase a copy, please visit
**http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=13096*
<http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=13096>
Contributors include: Barbara Abrash, Negar Azimi, Ariella Azoulay,
Amahl Bishara, Judith Butler, Eduardo Cadava, Jonathan Crary, Ann
Cvetkovich, Faye Ginsburg, Sam Gregory, Zeynep Devrim Gürsel, Roger
Hallas, Andrew Herscher, Sandi Hilal, Kirsten Johnson, Liza Johnson,
Thomas Keenan, Carrie Lambert-Beatty, Jaleh Mansoor, Yates McKee, Meg
McLagan, Alessandro Petti, Hugh Raffles, Felicity D. Scott, Kendall
Thomas, Leshu Torchin, Eyal Weizman, Benjamin J. Young, Huma Yusuf, and
Charles Zerner.
---------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]