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   Book Info

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Double Exposures: The Subject of Cultural Analysis  
Author: Mieke Bal
ISBN: 0415917042
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Book News, Inc.
Examines the effect of display and the different types of looking they encourage, discussing the cultural and philosophical implications of museum displays, stories, paintings, and postcards in case studies from art history, museum studies, anthropology, and literary criticism. For graduate students in art and cultural studies. Includes b&w photos. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.


Book Description
A feminist literary theorist, specialist in Rembrandt, and a scholar with a knack for reading Old Testament stories, Mieke Bal weaves a tapestry of signs and meanings that enrich our senses. Her subject is the act of showing, the gesture of exposing to view. In a museum, for example, the object is on display, made visually available. "That's how it is," the display proclaims. But who says so? Bal's subjects are displays from the American Museum of Natural History, paintings by such figures as Courbet, Caravaggio, Artemisia Gentileschi, and Rembrandt, as well as works by twentieth-century artists, and such literary texts as Shakespeare's Rape of Lucrece.




Double Exposures: The Subject of Cultural Analysis

FROM THE PUBLISHER

A feminist literary theorist, specialist in Rembrandt, and a scholar with a knack for reading Old Testament stories, Mieke Bal weaves a tapestry of signs and meanings that enrich our senses. Her subject is the act of showing, the gesture of exposing to view. In a museum, for example, the object is on display, made visually available. "That's how it is," the display proclaims. But who says so?

Bal's subjects are displays from the American Museum of Natural History, paintings by such figures as Courbet, Caravaggio, Artemisia Gentileschi, and Rembrandt, as well as works by twentieth-century artists, and such literary texts as Shakespeare's Rape of Lucrece.

FROM THE CRITICS

Booknews

Examines the effect of display and the different types of looking they encourage, discussing the cultural and philosophical implications of museum displays, stories, paintings, and postcards in case studies from art history, museum studies, anthropology, and literary criticism. For graduate students in art and cultural studies. Includes b&w photos. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

     



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