[A] wide-ranging exploration of visual art, architecture, and opera in India, South Africa, Australia, and China … The author's descriptions of his experience living in South Africa and being with artists and artworks at exhibitions and performances are particularly rich and insightful.

CHOICE

Daniel Herwitz has produced an elegant and thoughtful set of polemics on cultural evolution in our age. On every page of this lively presentation I heartily agreed or heartily disagreed, but always enjoyed the argument.
He makes out his case for a post-post-colonial analysis neither in sorrow nor in anger. His writing conveys the quiet joy of a cultural activist who is stimulated rather than perturbed by noting that the world refuses to fit itself into the very conceptual frameworks that over the years he himself has helped to establish.

- Albie Sachs, activist, writer, and former judge on the Constitutional Court of South Africa.,

A different set of purposes define culture today than those that preoccupied the world in the immediate decades of decolonization. Focusing on art and music in diverse parts of the world, Daniel Herwitz explores a world that has largely shifted from the earlier days of nationalism, decolonization and cultural exclusion, to one of global markets and networks. Using examples from India and Mexico to South Africa, Australia and China, Herwitz argues that the cultural politics and art being produced in these places are now post- postcolonial. Where the postcolonial downplayed formerly Eurocentric forms and celebrated art with national consciousness, the rules for 21st century cultural authenticity are quickly disappearing. Young people think of themselves in relation to global culture rather than nation-¬-building; the project of producing a new and modern art for the incipient and rising postcolonial nation is out of date. By examining the shift in which art accesses the past and the rise of trends such as hitching consumer culture to celebrity forms and branding, Herwitz’s original and engaging exploration of contemporary art captures the ways in which art has given way to a new form of production, altering everything from the role of tradition and heritage in contemporary art to the terms of its vision and circulation.
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1. Introduction 2. Secularized Heritage and Fundamentalist India: The Case of MF Husain 3. Frida and Amrita 4. Preparing Art for Freedom in the New South Africa Chapter 5. Aboriginal, Abstract and Isi-­-Tsonga 6. Figaro South of the Zambesi 7. Xu Bing’s Archive of the Past 6. The Persistent Witness: George Gittoes Bibliography Index
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A new account of the concepts required to understand the complexity, power and interests at work in 21st-century global art.
Presents an original argument for a post-postcolonial cultural politics and art

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781474299664
Publisert
2017-01-26
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
572 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
208

Forfatter

Biographical note

Daniel Herwitz is Fredric Huetwell Professor of Philosophy, History of Art and Comparative Literature at the University of Michigan, USA where for a decade he directed the Institute for the Humanities. His previously published books include Aesthetics: Key Concepts in Philosophy (2008) as well as the award winning Star as Icon (2008), and M.F. Husain (1988). Herwitz frequently writes for galleries in New York City, London, Cape Town and other places.