Monuments as Cultural and Critical Objects
Monuments as Cultural and Critical Objects
From Mesolithic to Eco-queer
Houlton, Thomas
Taylor & Francis Ltd
11/2021
280
Dura
Inglês
9780367186753
15 a 20 dias
535
Descrição não disponível.
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction: 'Face the Dark Confusion': Experiencing Monuments
Part I. The Monument: Histories and Theories
1 The Monument and the Arts of Memory
2 Theorising the Monument
Part II. The Monument and Psychoanalysis
3 The Monument, the Holocaust, and the Crypt: Rachel Whiteread, Jacques Derrida, and Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's Cryptonymy
4 D.W. Winnicott and the Destruction of the Monument
5 Countermonuments, Transitional Objects, and the Fear of Breakdown
Part III. Monuments, Colonialism, and Imperial Spaces
6 Monuments and Colonial Domination
7 Cecil Rhodes, Oriel College, and the Will to Change
8 Decolonising Edward Colston in Bristol: The Contrapuntal Monument
Part IV: Queer Monuments
9 LGBTQIA+ Monuments, Sacred Heterotopias, and the Fantasy of Purity
10 Stonewall, Political Visibility, and the Pressures of LGBTQIA+ Memorialisation
11 Paranoid Monuments, Eve Sedgwick, and Queer Remembrance: (Or, You Probably Think This Monument Is About You)
12 The Monument and Queer Ecology
Epilogue: Mesolithic Monuments, ecosystemic collapse, and Hope in the Time of Coronavirus
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: 'Face the Dark Confusion': Experiencing Monuments
Part I. The Monument: Histories and Theories
1 The Monument and the Arts of Memory
2 Theorising the Monument
Part II. The Monument and Psychoanalysis
3 The Monument, the Holocaust, and the Crypt: Rachel Whiteread, Jacques Derrida, and Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's Cryptonymy
4 D.W. Winnicott and the Destruction of the Monument
5 Countermonuments, Transitional Objects, and the Fear of Breakdown
Part III. Monuments, Colonialism, and Imperial Spaces
6 Monuments and Colonial Domination
7 Cecil Rhodes, Oriel College, and the Will to Change
8 Decolonising Edward Colston in Bristol: The Contrapuntal Monument
Part IV: Queer Monuments
9 LGBTQIA+ Monuments, Sacred Heterotopias, and the Fantasy of Purity
10 Stonewall, Political Visibility, and the Pressures of LGBTQIA+ Memorialisation
11 Paranoid Monuments, Eve Sedgwick, and Queer Remembrance: (Or, You Probably Think This Monument Is About You)
12 The Monument and Queer Ecology
Epilogue: Mesolithic Monuments, ecosystemic collapse, and Hope in the Time of Coronavirus
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Colonial Monuments;Monument;Young Man;Cultural;Cecil Rhodes;Culture;Confers;Object;Smooth;Queer;Held;Heritage;Commemorative Work;Politics;Overburden;History;Public Engagement;Psychoanalysis;Above Ground;Autoethnography;Life Forms;Social;Pristine;Sexual;Queer Ecology;Winnicott;Oriel College;Abraham;Christopher Park;Torok;Ingar Dragset;Derrida;Highgate Cemetery;Site;World War Ii Monument;Identity;Cut Flowers;Rememberance;Holding Environment;Intersectionality;Contrapuntal Reading;Houlton;Alois Riegl;Sea Urchins;Creative Dependence;York NY
List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction: 'Face the Dark Confusion': Experiencing Monuments
Part I. The Monument: Histories and Theories
1 The Monument and the Arts of Memory
2 Theorising the Monument
Part II. The Monument and Psychoanalysis
3 The Monument, the Holocaust, and the Crypt: Rachel Whiteread, Jacques Derrida, and Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's Cryptonymy
4 D.W. Winnicott and the Destruction of the Monument
5 Countermonuments, Transitional Objects, and the Fear of Breakdown
Part III. Monuments, Colonialism, and Imperial Spaces
6 Monuments and Colonial Domination
7 Cecil Rhodes, Oriel College, and the Will to Change
8 Decolonising Edward Colston in Bristol: The Contrapuntal Monument
Part IV: Queer Monuments
9 LGBTQIA+ Monuments, Sacred Heterotopias, and the Fantasy of Purity
10 Stonewall, Political Visibility, and the Pressures of LGBTQIA+ Memorialisation
11 Paranoid Monuments, Eve Sedgwick, and Queer Remembrance: (Or, You Probably Think This Monument Is About You)
12 The Monument and Queer Ecology
Epilogue: Mesolithic Monuments, ecosystemic collapse, and Hope in the Time of Coronavirus
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: 'Face the Dark Confusion': Experiencing Monuments
Part I. The Monument: Histories and Theories
1 The Monument and the Arts of Memory
2 Theorising the Monument
Part II. The Monument and Psychoanalysis
3 The Monument, the Holocaust, and the Crypt: Rachel Whiteread, Jacques Derrida, and Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's Cryptonymy
4 D.W. Winnicott and the Destruction of the Monument
5 Countermonuments, Transitional Objects, and the Fear of Breakdown
Part III. Monuments, Colonialism, and Imperial Spaces
6 Monuments and Colonial Domination
7 Cecil Rhodes, Oriel College, and the Will to Change
8 Decolonising Edward Colston in Bristol: The Contrapuntal Monument
Part IV: Queer Monuments
9 LGBTQIA+ Monuments, Sacred Heterotopias, and the Fantasy of Purity
10 Stonewall, Political Visibility, and the Pressures of LGBTQIA+ Memorialisation
11 Paranoid Monuments, Eve Sedgwick, and Queer Remembrance: (Or, You Probably Think This Monument Is About You)
12 The Monument and Queer Ecology
Epilogue: Mesolithic Monuments, ecosystemic collapse, and Hope in the Time of Coronavirus
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Colonial Monuments;Monument;Young Man;Cultural;Cecil Rhodes;Culture;Confers;Object;Smooth;Queer;Held;Heritage;Commemorative Work;Politics;Overburden;History;Public Engagement;Psychoanalysis;Above Ground;Autoethnography;Life Forms;Social;Pristine;Sexual;Queer Ecology;Winnicott;Oriel College;Abraham;Christopher Park;Torok;Ingar Dragset;Derrida;Highgate Cemetery;Site;World War Ii Monument;Identity;Cut Flowers;Rememberance;Holding Environment;Intersectionality;Contrapuntal Reading;Houlton;Alois Riegl;Sea Urchins;Creative Dependence;York NY