Contemporary Art, World Cinema, and Visual Culture

Contemporary Art, World Cinema, and Visual Culture

Essays by Hamid Dabashi

Edited by Hamid Keshmirshekan

"Contemporary Art, World Cinema, and Visual Culture: Essays by Hamid Dabashi" brings together the work of a theorist of modern and contemporary arts to map out more universal issues of concern to art theory and criticism.

PDF, 374 Pages

ISBN:9781783089208

March 2019

£25.00, $40.00

EPUB, 374 Pages

ISBN:9781783089215

March 2019

£25.00, $40.00

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
  • Series
  • Table of Contents
  • Links
  • Podcasts

About This Book

Contemporary Art, World Cinema, and Visual Culture: Essays by Hamid Dabashi is a collection of writings by the acclaimed cultural critic and scholar. A thorough Introduction rigorously frames chapters and identifies in Dabashi’s writings a comprehensive approach, which forms the criteria for selecting the essays for the volume. The Introduction also teases out of these essays the overarching theme that holds them together, the manner they inform a particularly critical angle in them and the way they cohere. This Introduction dwells on the work of one scholar, public intellectual and theorist of modern and contemporary arts to extrapolate more universal issues of concern to art criticism in general. These scattered materials and their underlying theoretical and critical logic are a unique contribution to the field of modern and contemporary arts.

Reviews

“Dabashi is the grammarian of hope. He is not offering us the common liberal hopeful analysis; rather it is the analytical hope that Gramsci yearned for but couldn’t see. In these essays, Dabashi explicates the architectonics of oppressive vision(s), only to show us some of the real possibilities of practicing visions of hope.”
—Ismail Nashef, Associate Professor, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar

“A critical and insightful collection of texts, challenging many ideas about cultural relations between ‘East’ and ‘West’—with Shirin Neshat’s work as a unifying thread.”
—Silvia Naef, Professor, Arabic Studies Section, University of Geneva, Switzerland

“Hamid Dabashi’s transcultural and intradisciplinary scholarship has provided a much-needed and otherwise-absent alternative critical voice in the field. The essays selected in this volume by Hamid Keshmirshekan enrich our understanding of regional and diasporic Middle Eastern contemporary art and aesthetics from a diverse and postcolonial perspective.”
—Nada Shabout, Professor of Art History, University of North Texas, USA

Author Information

Hamid Keshmirshekan is an art historian, critic, senior teaching fellow at the Department of History of Art and Archaeology, School of Arts, and research associate at the London Middle East Institute, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. He has been senior lecturer and head of Art History Department at the Advanced Research Institute of Art, Iranian Academy of Arts (2013–17) and associate fellow at the Khalili Research Centre, Faculty of Oriental Studies (2004–12) as well as in the History of Art Department at Oxford University (2012–13). He received his PhD in the history of art from SOAS in 2004 and was awarded two post-doctoral fellowships by Oxford University in 2004-5 and the British Academy, AHRC and ESRC in 2008, at Oxford University. His publications include the edited volume "Contemporary Art from the Middle East: Regional Interactions with Global Art Discourses" (2015) and "Contemporary Iranian Art: New Perspectives" (2013).

Series

No series for this title.

Table of Contents

Section 1: Theory; 1.1 Récit de l’Exil Occidental; 1.2 East Is Not East; 1.3 Trauma, Memory, and History; Section 2: Visual Arts; 2.1 Artists without Borders: On Contemporary Iranian Art; 2.2 Persian Blues; 2.3 It Was in China, Late One Moonless Night; 2.4 The Gun and the Gaze: Shirin Neshat’s Photography; 2.5 Bordercrossings: Shirin Neshat’s Body of Evidence; 2.6 Shirin Neshat: Transcending the Boundaries of an Imaginative Geography; 2.7 Capturing the Illusion of Reality: Mapping the Visual Subconscious of a People in the Photography of Bahman Jalali; 2.8 Shoja Azari: Making the Homely Unhomely; 2.9 Ardeshir Mohassess, Etcetera; 2.10 Nicky Nodjoumi, Etcetera; Section 3: Cinema; 3.1 Quis Custodiet ipsos Custodes: Who Watches the Watchers?; 3.2 The Sublime and the Beautiful in the Time of Terror; 3.3 Women without Headaches; 3.4 Warriors of Faith; 3.5 The Rostamaneh Complex and Sohrab Syndrome; 3.6 Amir Naderi’s New York; 3.7 The '300' Stroke; 3.8 Tarek Al-Ghoussein Does Not Exist; 3.9 A Deadly Cinematic Subconscious; 3.10 In the Shadow of Two Monuments; Index.

Links

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