Cover image for Comparativism in art history
Comparativism in art history
Title:
Comparativism in art history

Studies in art historiography ;
Author:
Elsner, Jaś, editor.
ISBN:
9781472418845
Physical Description:
x, 233 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm.
Series:
Studies in art historiography ; 12

Studies in art historiography ; 12.
General Note:
"An Ashgate book"--Cover.
Contents:
Introduction: some stakes of comparison / Stanley Abe and Jas Elsner -- Our literal speed / Our Literal Speed -- Locations of comparison: some personal observations / Wu Hung -- Bivisibility: why art history is comparative / Whitney Davis -- Redundancy, transformation, impersonation / Margaret Olin -- The object in the comparative context / Ittai Weinryb -- Sculpture: a comparative history / Stanley Abe -- Intersecting historiographies: Henri Pirenne, Ernest Herzfeld, and the myth of origin / Avinoam Shalem -- Comparativism in anthropology: big questions and scaled comparison: an illusive dream? / Susanne Kuchler -- Was the Knidia a statue? Art history and the terms of comparison / Richard Neer -- Christian Marclay's real-time fiction / Robert Slifkin -- Narrative, naturalism, and the body in classical Greek and early imperial Chinese art / Jeremy Tanner.
Abstract:
Featuring some of the major voices in the world of art history, this volume explores the methodological aspects of comparison in the historiography of the discipline. The essays assess the strengths and weaknesses of the comparative practice in the history of art, and consider the larger issue of the place of the comparative in how art history may develop in the future. The contributors represent a comprehensive range of period and geographic command from antiquity to modernity, from China and Islam to Europe, from various forms of art history to archaeology, anthropology and material culture studies. Art history is less a single discipline than a series of divergent scholarly fields - in very different historical, geographic and cultural contexts - but all with a visual emphasis on the close examination of objects. These fields focus on different, often incompatible temporal and cultural contexts, yet nonetheless they regard themselves as one coherent discipline - namely the history of art. There are substantive problems in how the sub-fields within the broad-brush generalization called 'Art History' can speak coherently to each other. These are more urgent since the shift from an art history centered on the western tradition to one that is consciously global.
Added Author:
Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Field 805:
npmlib 10703451 N7480 C65 ysh
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