3,851 results on '"Iconoclasm"'
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2. "Where the Aura of a Tyrant Remains": Absent Presence and Mnemonic Remains of Socialist-Era Monuments.
- Author
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Andrejevs, Dmitrijs
- Subjects
- *
COLLECTIVE memory , *ICONOCLASM , *MONUMENTS , *SOCIALISM - Abstract
This article is dedicated to the absent presence and mnemonic remains of the socialist-era monuments in eastern Europe. Mnemonic remains is a metaphor I employ in this paper to direct our attention to the physical absence of monuments after their removal. But it also speaks of a monument's role in absentia , its continued existence in and its effects on the collective memory beyond its physical presence. The phenomenon, sporadically acknowledged but rarely subject of investigation in academic literature, is explored and illustrated through the lens of the removed V.I. Lenin monument in Riga. The absent monument, I contend, performs the function of a phantom monument, exerting mnemonic agency beyond its physical presence through its representational value for other memory projects. This is highlighted through the study of the proposed and completed, but never unveiled, monument to Konstantīns Čakste on the site of the former Lenin monument in Riga. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Iconoclash and the climate movement.
- Author
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Garland, Joshua
- Subjects
- *
ICONOCLASM , *VANDALISM , *MUTILATION & defacement , *PROTEST movements , *SOCIAL movements , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Priceless artworks are being destroyed or, at least, they appear to be. Yet the very act of climate protest targeting these works in what could be construed as acts of vandalism are in themselves productive of new visual media through which climate concern and urgency is conveyed. This article offers reflections upon one way in which these protest actions may be conceptually understood. It does so with particular regard to Latour's notion of 'iconoclash' in which an indeterminacy around the actions, meanings and outcomes of these protests can be identified and explored for their possible implications in the context of the climate crisis. It argues that recent protest forms represent a novel approach to climate messaging, but remain problematic. There is an iconoclash-related tension in the visually striking art destruction which, contrarily, avoids causing damage while producing new visual materials in the form of event images. It is contended that the questions that arise from the visually destructive acts ultimately distract from the climate claim-making by causing debate around the validity and efficacy of targeting art in protest instead. Hence, iconoclash is advocated as a useful conceptual tool through which to analyse this novel, contemporary form of climate protest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Bob's Beat: Dylan, A Poet among Poets.
- Author
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Gontarski, S. E.
- Subjects
ICONOCLASM ,AMERICAN folk songs - Abstract
This essay explores the literary resonances of the Nobel Prize committee's 2016 citation of Bob Dylan's work "for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition." That "new poetic expression" has grown out of and developed through a spirit of iconoclasm and estrangement very much in the American grain and it runs through not only the American folk "song tradition" but through the Beat Generation of writers even as the shape-changing troubadour-poet never was nor would he ever become a full-fledged card-carrying Beat poet nor a traditional poet of any sort as he became a poet among poets on the road finally to becoming Bob Dylan or rather to creating Dylan Nobel laureate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The sacred image in the liturgy as seen by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
- Author
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Janusz Królikowski
- Subjects
liturgy ,image ,iconoclasm ,divine revelation ,salvation ,biblical tradition ,contemplation ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Abstract
In his theological reflections on the question of liturgy in the Church, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger also addressed the issue of art and the sacred image. He did not develop any theological aesthetics of his own, but his theological remarks on the image are of great importance. Ratzinger demonstrated that the image is an integral and integrating part of the liturgy and, as such, demands appropriate consideration within the Church. Two issues merit particular attention in the context of contemporary challenges, particularly the phenomenon of what has been termed ‘new iconoclasm’. The first issue is that of the coherent presence of the image in the ongoing development of divine revelation, which moves from the Old to the New Testament. This clearly expresses the need for the image. Subsequently, the liturgy, which is rooted in the history of revelation and represents its lived experience within the Church, requires the image in order for it to reveal its full salvific meaning. The purpose of the image in the liturgy, and in a broader sense in the Church, is to prompt contemplation and adoration of the love of God revealed in Jesus Christ.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. WITHIN THE FABRIC OF PUBLIC SPACE: TEXTILE INTERVENTIONS IN CURRENT PROCESSES OF DECOLONIZING MONUMENTS.
- Author
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Crasemann, Leena and Röhl, Anne
- Abstract
The debate on decolonizing monuments has provoked a great deal of covering and shrouding of public sculptures. This paper looks at three examples and shows how textile interventions alter a monument's visibility and, as products of (post)colonial trade or communal handicraft, add semantic layers. Ranging from The Kudzu Project's marking of Confederate monuments in Charlottesville, VA, through the covering of the Robert Milligan statue by protesters in London, to a curated artwork by Joiri Minaya in Hamburg, the examples span both geographical regions and the recent history of the debate. The paper proposes that textile ephemerality questions concepts of history embedded in the traditional materiality of public sculptures and provides a model for imagining other practices of commemoration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Contranarrativas visuales en tiempos de iconoclasia en la escultura del general Manuel Baquedano durante el estallido social en Chile de 2019.
- Author
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Riquelme Loyola, Manuel
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,DISCOURSE analysis ,ICONOCLASM ,NINETEENTH century ,MONUMENTS ,PUBLIC sculpture ,PUBLIC demonstrations - Abstract
Copyright of Aposta is the property of Aposta and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
8. Fascist-Axis Slovakia's spiritual Polis Politicus: transformation of Ružomberok to the 'capital of the movement' under the Hlinka's Slovak People's Party Rule (1938–1945).
- Author
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Hruboň, Anton
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL parties , *ICONOCLASM , *AESTHETICS - Abstract
After the events of autumn 1938, the Hlinka's Slovak People's Party (Hlinkova slovenská ľudová strana; HSĽS) engaged in mythmaking to legitimize its regime in people's eyes. This included making a legend about the 'capital of the movement', a city linked to the party's political struggle leading to 'ultimate victory'. Ružomberok was naturally chosen, where chairman Andrej Hlinka lived and worked as a priest, and the party's influential Ružomberok group came from. Using a creative destruction lens, this study follows the transformation of Ružomberok's image from a provincial, politically insignificant town to the Slovak State's spiritual metropolis and fascist Neueuropa's progressive model city. We focus on the dynamics of reshaping: from initial plans, unimplemented reconstruction projects to politically motivated interventions in the public space to remodel Ružomberok corresponding to the new national ideology into a polis politicus highlighting the new aesthetics and values. Finally, we analyse political iconoclasm's specific manifestations based on examples of political interference in architecture. We also reflect on the collapse of the old, 'decadent' to the construction of the new, 'progressive' on a societal level as targeted attempts by political elites to prove their system's vitality through modernization compared to its predecessors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. FOGO, DESTRUIÇÃO E CRIAÇÃO: A ARTE DE ANSELM KIEFER E A FILOSOFIA DE ANDREA EMO.
- Author
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Ragazzi, Alexandre
- Subjects
NATURE in art ,NATURE (Aesthetics) ,FOREST fires ,PHILOSOPHERS ,GESTURE - Abstract
Copyright of Palíndromo is the property of Universidade do Estado de Santa Catarina and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. III. The Price of Iconoclasm: Liability and the Reparation of Churches in the Work of Petrus Peckius (1529–1589).
- Author
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Silva, Ana Luiza Ferreira Gomes
- Subjects
CHURCH work ,PRICES ,ICONOCLASM ,LAW teachers ,DAMAGES (Law) ,CHURCH membership ,SACRED space - Abstract
This paper analyzes the juridical issues concerning the material reparation of churches and sacred objects after the Iconoclastic Fury in 1566–1567, based on the works of Petrus Peckius (1529–1589). The Fury left an unprecedented path of destruction in many towns of the Low Countries. It presented society not only with political and religious challenges but also with a myriad of legal ones. As a Leuven law professor in this time of chaos, Peckius published the treatise "De sacrosanctis et catholicis Christi ecclesiis reparandis ac reficiendis" (1573). Peckius' take on the theme reveals an intricate analysis of the varied circumstances of destruction, the means of funding the repairs, and the liability of different actors – from the perpetrators of the destruction themselves to the prelate, the parishioners, and even town magistrates. After an initial overview of the Iconoclastic Fury and a brief biographical note on Peckius and his works, this paper will present Peckius' ideas in a 'timeline' of three phases: going, respectively, from the assessment of damages and planning the extent of restoration; to considerations on liability; and, finally, to the juridical means of enforcement. Along with each phase, we provide critical reflections on Peckius' influences and positions in the context of the Iconoclastic Fury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. Iconophobia and Iconophilia
- Author
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Džalto, Davor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Within the Fabric of Public Space
- Author
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Leena Crasemann and Anne Röhl
- Subjects
Monuments ,Iconoclasm ,Textiles ,Decolonization ,Activism ,Arts in general ,NX1-820 - Abstract
The debate on decolonizing monuments has provoked a great deal of covering and shrouding of public sculptures. This paper looks at three examples and shows how textile interventions alter a monument’s visibility and, as products of (post)colonial trade or communal handicraft, add semantic layers. Ranging from The Kudzu Project’s marking of Confederate monuments in Charlottesville, VA, through the covering of the Robert Milligan statue by protesters in London, to a curated artwork by Joiri Minaya in Hamburg, the examples span both geographical regions and the recent history of the debate. The paper proposes that textile ephemerality questions concepts of history embedded in the traditional materiality of public sculptures and provides a model for imagining other practices of commemoration.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Discreet Charm of Things: An Anthropological-Archaeology Perspective
- Author
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Singh, Prashant Kumar, Kanungo, Alok Kumar, editor, Smith, Claire, editor, and Choksi, Nishaant, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Heritage Preservation in Bamiyan: Achievements 2002–21
- Author
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Bouchenaki, Mounir, Bartezzaghi, Emilio, Series Editor, Bracchi, Giampio, Series Editor, Del Bo, Adalberto, Series Editor, Sagarra Trias, Ferran, Series Editor, Stellacci, Francesco, Series Editor, Zio, Enrico, Series Editor, Loda, Mirella, editor, and Abenante, Paola, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. The Fate of Bamiyan’s Giant Buddha Statues
- Author
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Hinz, Manfred, Bartezzaghi, Emilio, Series Editor, Bracchi, Giampio, Series Editor, Del Bo, Adalberto, Series Editor, Sagarra Trias, Ferran, Series Editor, Stellacci, Francesco, Series Editor, Zio, Enrico, Series Editor, Loda, Mirella, editor, and Abenante, Paola, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Iconoclastic Imagination: John Donne’s Metaphysical Conceits
- Author
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Cooper, Amy, Kaethler, Mark, editor, and Williams, Grant, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Reading Contemporary Decolonial Iconoclasm in Belgium with Žižek, Yousfi and Fanon
- Author
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Pauwels, Matthias, Sanni, John Sodiq, editor, and Villet, Charles Mathurin, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Matter of Violence: A New Materialist Reading of Woman Jerusalem's Body in Ezekiel 16 and 23.
- Author
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Dawson, Cindy
- Subjects
- *
MATERIALISM , *ZIONISM , *THEOLOGY , *DISABILITY studies , *ICONOCLASM - Abstract
This article analyzes violence against the body of Woman Jerusalem in Ezek. 16 and 23 from a New Materialist perspective. As a methodology, New Materialism forges new paths when considering the female body and agency: namely, literal and literary bodies possess the ability to transform their literal and literary worlds, even when— especially when—these bodies become entangled in violent acts. This article therefore considers Woman Jerusalem's violated body from two perspectives. The first is the perspective of Ezekiel-the-exiled-priest and the centrality of Woman Jerusalem's body in his theological project of identity building. The second is the perspective of Ezekiel-the-iconoclast and the ability of Woman Jerusalem's body to survive his acts of violence and reemerge as an intercessor. Such continuity has profound significance for the evolving Zion tradition, which follows the body of Woman Jerusalem to the other side of exile and there reconsiders the relationship between Yahweh, Jerusalem, and her human inhabitants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A change of heart? Theophilos on his deathbed.
- Author
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Panou, Eirini
- Subjects
HISTORIOGRAPHY ,NARRATION ,EMPERORS - Abstract
This article examines the last moments of the emperor Theophilos and how his dying moments are related in Byzantine historiography. His religious policy is central here. In fact, Theophilos' stance on images is what allows us today to categorize narratives of his final moments, based on whether he repented for his iconoclastic policy. Three groups of narratives can be distinguished; those that claim that the emperor repented, those that claim that he did not, and those that are silent on the issue. Death narratives in historical writing constitute a commonplace in Kaiserkritik, and Theophilos' dying moments are no exception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Holy icon or sacred body? The image of the emperor in the iconoclastic controversy.
- Author
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Carile, Maria Cristina
- Subjects
STATE power ,EMPERORS ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,VISUAL communication ,ICONOCLASM - Abstract
Throughout Iconoclasm the imperial icon was used in iconophile writings as the major argument in support of icon veneration. It included images of the emperor reproduced in various media and even panel portraits. Although the latter have not survived, they were real objects with a strong presence in the Byzantine system of visual communication. This paper will show that that the role of the imperial icon in Byzantine imagery and image theory was closely connected to the perception of the emperor and of the sacred imperial power in Byzantium. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. From Leonardo to Caravaggio: Affective Darkness, the Franciscan Experience and Its Lombard Origins.
- Author
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Muraoka, Anne H.
- Subjects
RELIGIOUS art ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,SEVENTEENTH century ,COUNTER-Reformation ,ICONOCLASM - Abstract
The function of affectivity has generally focused on post-Council of Trent paintings, where artists sought a new visual language to address the imperative function of sacred images in the face of Protestant criticism and iconoclasm, either guided by the Council's decree on images, post-Tridentine treatises on sacred art, or by the Counter-Reformation climate of late Cinquecento and early Seicento Italy. This essay redirects the origins of the transformation of the function of chiaroscuro from objective to subjective, from corporeal to spiritual, and from rational to affective to a much earlier period in late Quattrocento and early Cinquecento Milan with Leonardo da Vinci. By tracing the transformation of chiaroscuro as a vehicle of affect beginning with Leonardo's Virgin of the Rocks, it will become evident that chiaroscuro became a device used to focalize the viewers' experience dramatically and to move viewers visually and mystically toward unification with God under the influence of the Franciscans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Fear of Art: How Censorship Becomes Iconoclasm.
- Author
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Freedberg, David
- Subjects
- *
ICONOCLASM , *CENSORSHIP , *PARADOX , *FIGURATIVE art - Abstract
Every act of censorship is also an act of iconoclasm. Together they constitute one of the oldest paradoxes of image making and of figuration. To make an image is both to want it and to fear it. The more it is desired, the more it seems contra naturam , and so is feared. It often has a vitality that is startlingly at odds with both its materiality and its concept. To parse individual episodes of censorship and iconoclasm is to uncover the roots of both the fear of images and the fear of art. But each of the many motives for censorship and iconoclasm testify, above all, to the impossibility of escaping it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Connecting Historic Graffiti to Past Parishes and Beliefs.
- Author
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Hollis, Crystal
- Subjects
- *
INSCRIPTIONS , *GRAFFITI , *PARISHES , *MIDDLE Ages , *LOCAL history , *MODERN society - Abstract
Historic graffiti offer new and interesting insights into late medieval and early modern English society. This paper will show the value of studying these inscriptions by discussing two churches constructed in the late medieval period in Suffolk, England, with drawings of two figures that potentially represent the Virgin Mary and the Christ Child. These drawings are similar and yet quite different in their quality and execution, and they possibly relate to lost medieval imagery within the building. These images may also have been created in response to various iconoclastic movements that occurred as part of the Reformation as well as after it. This paper seeks to encourage further study on the relationship between historic graffiti and local history by observing the connection between the late medieval parish churches of Lidgate and Stradishall and their respective figural drawings by suggesting that graffiti serve a larger purpose than idle drawing or doodling and instead are valuable pieces of evidence about parish life and values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Theology of the Icon
- Author
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Aidan Hart
- Subjects
theology and the arts ,liturgy ,matter ,iconography ,icons ,liturgical art ,ecology ,materialism ,anthropology ,architecture ,imagery ,iconoclasm ,Doctrinal Theology ,BT10-1480 - Abstract
The Christian icon – from eikon, the Greek word for ‘image’ – has been part of liturgical worship from the early centuries of the Christian era, and sometimes also a subject of theological debate. On the one hand, icons have been described by iconodules or iconophiles (those defending icons and their veneration) as theology in material form and as doors between heaven and earth. They asserted that images of Christ affirmed the reality of God’s enfleshment in Christ: Christ God can be depicted because he has become a visible human. They defended icons of saints as affirmations of the purpose of the incarnation, namely, to bring people into union with God – a process of deification or theosis, as this union is also named. On the other hand, those opposed to images – iconoclasts (‘icon smashers’) or iconophobes (those averse to or ‘afraid’ of icons) – have condemned them as idols or, at best, as impediments to a relationship with God. Extant images of Christ and the saints found on catacomb walls date certainly from the early third century, and possibly as early as the late second century (Finney 1994: 146). For two periods during the eighth and ninth centuries, theological debate erupted within the Eastern Roman Empire (generally referred to as Byzantium from the nineteenth century) between iconoclasts and iconodules. The dispute was eventually won in favour of icons. Thereafter, sacred imagery was firmly established as an integral part of Christian liturgy, though with East and West placing different emphases as to their role. From around the mid-thirteenth century, liturgical art in the Catholic West gradually became more naturalistic, in line with theological and philosophical changes. The picture was further complicated with the rise of Protestant iconoclasm from the sixteenth century. In the meantime, traditional iconography, though sometimes stylistically influenced by these currents, continued in the Orthodox Church with far less change, hence the current association of iconography primarily with Orthodoxy. In the early twentieth century, this Orthodox icon tradition was reintroduced to the western European world, and then internationally, to stimulate fresh research and discussion about the relationship between the form and function of Christian iconography. Icons are made primarily for liturgical use, be they painted, carved, or made of metal, mosaic, or fabric. This use has profoundly influenced their form. The theological significance of this form has inspired much study over the past century, challenging as it does a rationalistic and anthropocentric world view. Though made for liturgical use, icons have had a profound impact beyond church walls, such as in mission, and in offering a theological paradigm for addressing contemporary issues such as ecology, the nature of the human person, art, and the relationship between tradition and innovation.
- Published
- 2024
25. Civil war, museum and iconoclasm in Northern Ethiopia: Dessie and Merho Museums in focus.
- Author
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Ahmed, Mohammed Jemal
- Subjects
CIVIL war ,ICONOCLASM ,HOUSE painting ,MUSEUMS ,HISTORIC house museums - Abstract
Ethnically or religiously motivated civil war and the subsequent iconoclastic acts are practical challenges that museums face in the twenty-first century. This article briefly discusses the destruction of museums during the Northern Ethiopia civil war of 2020–2022. The example of iconoclasm in Dessie and Merho Museums is explored to provide a lens through which deeper understandings can be drawn on why and how iconoclasm was practiced during the Northern Ethiopia civil war. The study employs qualitative research methods, including extensive systematic field observation, focus group discussions and in-depth interviews. The study's findings indicate that the collections of Dessie and Meriho Museums were deliberately damaged and pillaged. Ancient artifacts, photographs, documents and paintings housed in these museums were vandalized, sprinkled on the wall of the museums or pillaged. Museum objects of Dessie and Merho were destroyed deliberately in haste and violence, and the information consequently lost with them is irreplaceable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. An Afro-cosmological Approach to Marechera's The House of Hunger (1978).
- Author
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Fingson, Kundai Watson and Ngara, Kudzayi
- Subjects
- *
ICONOCLASM , *SOCIALIZATION , *SCHOOL restructuring - Abstract
Marechera and his literary texts do not fit easily into Africanist categories of reading, principally due to his vitriolic invocation of the 'f-word' when asked if he was an African writer. Despite this iconoclasm, Afro-cosmic creeds undeniably inform aspects of his novella. An Afro-cosmological approach acknowledges non-empirical influences for certain behavioural traits portrayed by various characters in the novella which Marechera utilises and assails to address a 'diseased' colonial life. Using Falola's Ritual Archives (2017), we approach this novella as a repository of Shona social ideation and cultural mythologies of haunting, and the Isisism trope of putting material remains back together. Numerous invocations of Shona cosmologies demonstrate Marechera's socialisation into an African cosmology which manifests itself in his writing and life in unlimited ways. In sum, we interrogate the author's use of culture codes to relocate him within an African rationale, thus, unmooring him from the Western-centric frameworks emphasised by Veit-Wild's memoir (2020). We offer insights into the spirituality surrounding Marechera, his vagabondage and his seemingly self-sabotaging behaviour succinctly summarised by Veit-Wild as 'biting every hand that fed you.' Flora Veit-Wild, using the logic of a European, fails to appreciate this aspect of his life. In this article we recentre an African cosmology through the topos of being haunted to conceptualise Marechera's writing and life to account for non-Western occurrences and modes of psychic distress which find no diagnosis in Western psychiatry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The sacred image in the liturgy as seen by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.
- Author
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Królikowski, Janusz
- Subjects
RELIGIOUS art ,LOVE of God ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,LITURGICS ,LITURGIES - Abstract
Copyright of Sacrum et Decorum is the property of Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. La vanguardia paradójica de Juan José Saer: señuelos y escamoteos.
- Author
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Longoni, Bruno
- Subjects
WESTERN civilization ,SELF-portraits ,ICONOCLASM ,PARODY ,NONCITIZENS ,HAIKU ,APOCRYPHAL Gospels - Abstract
Copyright of Literatura y Lingüística is the property of Universidad Catolica Cardenal Raul Silva Henriquez and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Ozick's Idols.
- Author
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Moshenska, Joe
- Abstract
An exploration of Ozick's critique of Harold Bloom, in which she argues that his literary critical schemas amount to a form of idolatry, is developed into a wider account of the place of the risks of idol making and idol worship in her fictional and nonfictional writings. Ozick is seen to gradually move from a vision of the imagination as intrinsically idolatrous—hence the very notion of a Jewish writer is seen as contradictory—toward a moderated stance in which the risks of idolatrous imagining can be navigated, if never eliminated altogether. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. French Kissing the Icon: Erotic Iconoclash and Political Subversion in Deborah Castillo's The Emancipatory Kiss (2013).
- Author
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Troconis, Irina R.
- Subjects
- *
KISSING , *MEDIA studies , *ICONOCLASM , *AUDIENCES - Abstract
This article explores the obscene's potential to become politically subversive through the analysis of the performance video The Emancipatory Kiss (2013) by Venezuelan artist Deborah Castillo. Drawing from a theoretical corpus that brings together pornography studies and media studies, memory, and materiality, and that engages with iconoclasm as defined by Bruno Latour and Michael Taussig, I discuss the operations that enable Castillo's piece to perform an act of what I call "erotic iconoclash", which, I propose, makes visible and palpable the fragility of the power attributed to hypermasculine military figures of authority. I argue that Castillo's act of erotic iconoclash generates a residue—an intolerable secretion—in the image that resists being absorbed into symbol or narrative, that arouses and moves the audience, and that is not concerned with making sense of the world, but rather with un-making the world as we know it. In doing so, it opens up a way for us to rethink the relationship we establish with the dead and their many and varied afterlives outside the suffocating circularity created by acts of destruction and reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. İslam Hukukunda Kültür Varlıklarının Korunması ve Heykellerin Yıkılması Meselesi.
- Author
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AKGÜN, M. Raşit
- Abstract
Copyright of Marmara Üniversitesi Hukuk Fakültesi Hukuk Araştırmaları Dergisi is the property of Marmara University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Contested monuments and their afterlives : the V.I. Lenin monument in post-Soviet Riga
- Author
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Andrejevs, Dmitrijs, Ochman, Ewa, and Ulturgasheva, Olga
- Subjects
Art installations ,History museums ,Soviet ,Latvia ,Collective memory ,Lenin monument ,Absence ,Iconoclasm - Abstract
This thesis examines legacies of the socialist past in Riga, Latvia. It looks at the role of one socialist-era monument; the monument dedicated to Vladimir I. Lenin that was unveiled on the tenth anniversary of the establishment of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic and which was removed in the wake of the August Putsch and the declaration of de facto independence of the Republic of Latvia in 1991. The removal of the Lenin monument, as I argue in this thesis, was not the end of the monument. Rather, it became an absent monument. While I use the idea of an absent monument in this thesis as a convenient shorthand descriptor for the physical absence of monuments after their removal, it also speaks of the monuments role in absentia, its continued existence in, and its effects on, the collective memory beyond its physical presence. The study of a monument in absentia or in other words what I refer to as its mnemonic remains is one of the two cores of this thesis. This thesis scrutinizes two stages in the life history of the monument under consideration; its decline as a site of memory at the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union and its afterlives in the Republic of Latvia (1990-2018). First, I aim to understand the struggle over the Lenin monument and the wider memory regime that it stood for. My thesis traces the de-commemorative strategies of memory actors and in particular highlights the previously under-examined role of the Communist Party of Latvia in this late-Soviet memory work. Building on the extensive range of state and museum archives, this thesis makes a novel intervention into Latvian historiography of the late-Soviet period and in equal part contributes to the still limited literature on the removal of socialist-era monuments at the time of the collapse of socialism in eastern Europe. Second, this thesis looks beyond the removal of the monument and considers its mnemonic legacies. Building on my observations and engagement with recent exhibitions at the major history museums in Riga, I argue that the removal of the Lenin monument is preserved in the cultural memory as a threshold memory. Further, drawing on municipal archives and public debates, I look at the monument proposals for the empty site of the Lenin monument and trace how its mnemonic remains were mobilised for and against various proposed monuments. In this process, I uncover the transformation of the absent Lenin monument into what I characterise as a phantom monument. The mnemonic connection between the absent monument and its empty site is further explored through the lens of contemporary art. Building primarily on institutional and state archives, I investigate how the memory of the Lenin monument was engaged with by artists. I highlight the ways in which site-specific art installations simultaneously engaged with, negated, and layered upon the mnemonic remains of the Lenin monument. Taken together, this thesis is as much about the mnemonic remains of the Lenin monument as it is about collective memory production generally and within the context of Riga, Latvia specifically. The selection of the Lenin monument in Riga helps me to explore and highlight the legacies of the Soviet monumental past. More broadly, this thesis demonstrates the significance of the study of mnemonic remains and the afterlives of monuments as a way of contributing to our understanding of collective memory dynamics.
- Published
- 2022
33. 'By craftsman's arte' : theology and decorative practice in Scottish ecclesiastical and domestic buildings, 1560-1639
- Author
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Murdoch, Lauren, Parvis, Sara, and Hardman Moore, Susan
- Subjects
Reformation ,early modern Scotland ,idolatry ,iconoclasm ,architecture ,Reformation-Scotland ,wall paintings ,ceiling paintings ,marriage ,painted texts - Abstract
This thesis examines religious decoration and decoration in religious spaces in Scotland in the period between 1560 and 1639. It contends that between these dates there was a lively culture of decoration in ecclesiastical and domestic spaces. The following examples are considered using a Reformed theology lens, with close attention to artisanal methods and later restoration campaigns: the choir screen and furnishings at Dairsie Kirk (Fife), painted scriptural texts in St Nicholas' Church (Aberdeen), the layout and the painted ceiling at Stirling Castle's Chapel Royal, the layout and furnishing at the Palace of Holyrood House's Chapel Royal (Edinburgh), painted walls in the Chapel Royal at Falkland Palace (Fife), and painted ceilings at St Mary's Church, Grandtully (Perthshire), Skelmorlie Aisle (Largs), Traquair House (Peeblesshire), and Sailors' Walk, Kirkcaldy. Changes in architectural layout to suit Reformed worship, and how the removal and construction of divisions within the church space that previously indicated a profane/sacred divide were later exploited by James VI/I in fashioning his role as an absolute monarch, are considered. For the 1594 baptismal ceremony of his son Prince Henry, the King used the layout and decoration of the Stirling Castle Chapel Royal to bolster his genealogical claim to the English throne and demonstrate his alignment with divine authority. Similarly, his 1617 plan for a sumptuous seat with carvings of the Patriarchs and Apostles for the Palace of Holyrood House Chapel was strong visual propaganda that proclaimed royal authority over the Scottish Reformed Kirk and plans for conformity with the English Church. The presence or absence of unionist heraldry in church schemes is noted to argue that this indicates alignment with a pro- or anti-Royalist position rather than a Catholic or Protestant confessional position. The use of Biblical text as decoration in churches, aisles, and the home, including the Ten Commandments and the Psalms, is considered in the light of Reformed ideology, the approach to marriage, the core texts of the Scottish Reformed Kirk, the relationship with commonplace books, and how sight was understood. The use of text from the Geneva Bible in a decorative scheme for Charles I in 1633, rather than using text from the King James Bible, is investigated. The period opens with edicts against idolatry in legislation of the 1560s and the First Book of Discipline, and ends with a General Assembly Act of 1640. What was understood by 'idolatry', with the focus placed upon action rather than artefacts, is crucial for understanding whether or not decoration, such as in the schemes explored, was acceptable. The thesis indicates that the kingdom of Scotland was not antithetical to decoration in this period, rather the officially-authorised Kirk opposed any decoration that might lead Scots down a route that 'falsely' promised salvation.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Confucian Ethics and Confederate Memorials
- Author
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Harris, Thorian R and Philosophy Documentation Center
- Subjects
Confucian ethics ,Confederate memorials ,Iconoclasm - Abstract
As self-conscious curators and critics of moral history, the early Confucians are relevant to the contemporary debate over the fate of memorials dedicated to morally flawed individuals. They provide us with a pragmatic justification that is distinct from those utilized in the current debate, and in many respects superior to the alternatives. In addition to supplying this curative philosophic resource, the early Confucian practices of ancestral memorialization suggest preventative measures we might adopt to minimize the chances of establishing divisive and oppressive memorials in the future.
- Published
- 2022
35. Visual History and Informal Politicisation in the Nineteenth Century: The Example of Political Iconoclasm (France, 1814–1871)
- Author
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Fureix, Emmanuel, te Velde, Henk, Series Editor, Janse, Maartje, Series Editor, Schulz-Forberg, Hagen, Series Editor, Palacios Cerezales, Diego, editor, and Luján, Oriol, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Bizans İkonoklazm Tartışması (726-843) ve Ayasofya: Tasvir İhtilafının Mabedin Tezyinatına Etkisi/yzantine Iconoclastic Controversy (726-843) and the Hagia Sophia: The Impact of the Controversy of Images on the Ornaments of the Church
- Author
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Bilal Baş
- Subjects
hagia sophia ,icons ,iconoclasm ,council of nicea ii ,Philosophy of religion. Psychology of religion. Religion in relation to other subjects ,BL51-65 - Abstract
When the Byzantine Emperor Justinian inaugurated the Church of Hagia Sophia in 537 AD, mosaic icons did not exist. Instead, Justinian’s program included non-figurative and abstract decorative motifs and lots of crosses. The first appearance of the mosaic icons was dated to the late ninth century, after the final victory of the Iconodule theology in 843. The Orthodox church doctrine venerates icons as an object of worship in both public and private devotion. This doctrine mainly resulted from the Iconoclastic Controversy (726-843). It was a doctrinal controversy over the legitimacy of the employment of the pictures of Christ, Mary, and other holy people in worship in Christianity. The controversy took place mainly in Constantinople, where Hagia Sophia stood as the largest church of the entire empire. Therefore, the church witnessed the controversy as its outcome found its place on her walls and ceilings. In other words, when the traditional Iconoclastic view was dominant in the church, Hagia Sophia’s decorations included only non-figurative motifs and crosses. In contrast, icons began to appear in the Hagia Sophia after the vindication of Iconodulism as the official doctrine of the church. The purpose of this essay is to shed some light, with the help of modern studies, on the Iconoclastic and Iconodule theologies underlying these two kinds of alternative decorations. In this context, we will refer to Horos of the Iconoclastic Council of Hiereia in 754 for the Iconoclastic theology, and to the theological writings of John of Damascus for the Iconodule theology. By doing this, we will show how these alternative theological standpoints translated into the walls and ceilings of the Hagia Sophia.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. After the fall, where?: Relocating the Colston statue in Bristol, from 2020 to imaginary futures.
- Author
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Cole, Tim
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICAL geography , *STATUES , *MUSEUM exhibits , *HISTORY of geography , *GEOGRAPHERS , *ICONOCLASM - Abstract
Drawing on analysis of press reporting, museum display and a large-scale survey undertaken in Bristol in the aftermath of the 2020 toppling of the Colston statue, this article examines the shifting meanings given to the statue across a range of material and imagined sites. It works with two ways that history and geography intersect: the history of the sites/aftersites of this statue, and the materiality of histories in the sites/aftersites of this statue. Rather than the toppling of the Colston statue being a simple story of iconoclasm, a more complex historical geography was – and is – at play. As they imagined future aftersites for the Colston statue, people in the city saw this as an opportunity for some form of return of the statue – metaphorically if not materially – to one of its previous longer or shorter-lived homes. These former sites were seen to offer very different framings of the statue, as well as radically different ways of thinking about history. It is not simply historical geographers who are aware of the power of place in attributing meaning to statues. This can also be seen in popular responses to the afterlives, and aftersites, of the recent wave of fallen statues. • First study of popular views on the future of the toppled Colston statue. • Toppled statues continue to be, physically and discursively, on the move. • Individuals seek to enact material or imaginative return of toppled statues. • Sophisticated public awareness of the significance of location in framing meaning. • Popular understanding of the politics of museum display. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Babur, Akbar, and the Transformation of Gwalior's Rock-Hewn Tirthankaras.
- Author
-
Bernhaut, Ross Lee
- Abstract
During his 1528 sojourn in Gwalior, the first Mughal emperor, Babur (r. 1526–1530), encountered numerous colossal Digambara Jain Tirthankaras fashioned from outcrops in the Urvai valley. He recounts in his memoirs how he ordered the naked "idols" destroyed. While this famed episode of iconoclasm in the Bāburnāma is well known to scholars, three paintings portraying Babur's trip to Gwalior that survive from the multiple illustrated manuscripts commissioned by Babur's grandson Akbar (r. 1556–1605) have eluded close examination. This article probes the divergent representational strategies employed by the artists of those folios tasked with depicting the same scene. I demonstrate how one artist pictorially transformed Gwalior's rock-hewn Tirthankaras into animate idols, another alluded to yet elided their portrayal, and a third bypassed entirely the thorny issue of their representation. I argue that those illustrations constitute a visual emendation to Babur's memoirs that effectively exonerated Babur from any charge of desecrating inert Jain icons—an act by then incongruous with Akbar's policy of ṣulḥ-i kull and the strong Mughal-Jain relations at his court. This proposition is further supported by an original translation of an excerpt from Siddhicandra's (d. ca. 1666) Bhānucandragaṇicarita, a Sanskrit text composed by a Jain monk at the Mughal court. Ultimately, this study contributes to critical discourses on iconoclasm, artistic agency, Mughal-Jain relations, and historical memory by exploring the theoretical issues concerning the depiction of rock carvings and idols in the pictorial afterlife of Babur's encounter with Gwalior's rock-hewn Tirthankaras. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Poetik und Rhetorik.
- Author
-
Lachmann, Renate and Hofmann, Tatjana
- Subjects
GERMAN language ,SCHOOL year ,STUDENT interests ,ICONOCLASM ,POETICS - Abstract
Copyright of Berliner Debatte Initial is the property of Berliner Debatte Initial e.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. History and Power in Hume's 'Of Miracles': A Pragmaticist-Historicist Account.
- Author
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Willis, Andre C.
- Subjects
HISTORICISM ,ILLEGITIMACY ,SOCIAL forces ,POWER (Social sciences) ,PRAGMATISM - Abstract
This reconsideration of Hume's classic essay "Of Miracles" via the lens of American pragmatist ways of thinking about history and power shifts our attention from Hume's epistemic concerns about the legitimacy of witnesses and testimony to his distaste for sacred history, his critical stance regarding the social force of revelation, and his disdain for religious authority. To view Hume's essay both as an articulation of a critical philosophy of history and as an exercise in moral dynamism (social power or, authority, is a result of epistemic transactions), is to intervene in both Hume studies and Contemporary Pragmatism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Homoousios or Homoiosis: Redefining the Christian Image in the Wake of the Iconoclastic Controversy.
- Author
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Conty, Arianne
- Subjects
- *
CHRISTIAN philosophy , *ICONOCLASM , *WORSHIP , *JUDAISM ,BYZANTINE Empire - Abstract
This article will elucidate the philosophy of the image that developed in the wake of the Iconoclastic Controversy in the Eastern Christian Empire in the ninth Century. Iconophilia was finally reinstated after a wave of iconoclasm swept across the Empire. The controversy coincides with dramatic changes within the Byzantine empire, making it difficult to establish consensus amongst scholars regarding its possible causes. After discussing several of the theories that seek to explain the adoption of iconoclasm in the Byzantine Empire, we will seek to show how image veneration was transformed and differentiated from relic worship thanks to its encounter with iconoclasm. After reviewing icon veneration prior to the Iconoclastic Controversy, this article will elucidate the philosophy of the image developed by Patriarch Nicephorus in order to show how he differentiated veneration from idolatry by redefining the image as "similar to" (homoiosis) rather than consubstantial with (homoousios) its model. By differentiating image veneration from the theory of consubstantiality that was normative within Judaism and Islam, Christian philosophy of the image will differentiate resemblance from identity, inscription from circumscription, and thereby reveal iconoclasm to be in the eye of the beholder. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. "EM NOME DE DEUS": HIPÓTESES SOBRE O FENÔMENO DA ICONOCLASTIA RELIGIOSA NO BRASIL CONTEMPORÂNEO.
- Author
-
Habib, Clara and Valle, Arthur
- Subjects
FREEDOM of religion ,ATTRIBUTION of news ,ART ,CIVIL rights ,BIBLIOGRAPHY - Abstract
Copyright of Religião e Sociedade is the property of Instituto de Estudos da Religiao and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Iconoclast imperial authority and its contested legacy : from the Arab siege (717/18) until the death of Michael III (867)
- Author
-
Marić, Ivan, Gaul, Niels, and Brown, Tom
- Subjects
949.5 ,Constantinople ,Byzantine culture ,Constantine V ,Leo III ,Arab siege ,social memory ,iconoclasm ,hagiography ,Theophilos - Abstract
The thesis studies the first two iconoclast Byzantine emperors, Leo III (r. 717-41) and his son Constantine V (r. 741-75), and their highly-contested legacy. It first revisits the evidence for the reigns of Leo III and Constantine V, their policies and ideology, highlighting the aspects that made them powerful models of imperial authority and dynastic longevity that continued to be followed and imitated by successive emperors well into the ninth century, and those that contributed to their overall popularity among the Constantinopolitan citizens. The evidence suggests that the imperial authority, which had crumbled over the decades prior to Leo's ascension, began recovering in the wake of the successful defense of Constantinople during the second Arab siege in 717-718. The Byzantine imperial authority then reached new heights during Constantine's long reign, which allowed for the record of his and his father's achievements to become deeply embedded in social memory of the capital. In the minds of the many, these emperors' political and military success and their relative longevity in the office were interpreted as signs of divine grace, leading to the conclusion that their iconoclastic theological position must also be correct. The last chapter of the thesis traces the legacy of Leo and Constantine through historiography, hagiography, and material culture. It becomes clear that they remained popular figures, and the memory of their success came to the fore in the context of a protracted crisis of legitimacy exacerbated by a series of humiliating defeats suffered by the Bulgarians in the early ninth century (806-13). This period saw a competition of memory between partisans of iconoclasm and their iconophile opponents, yet, the more vicious polemic against Leo and Constantine that began emerging in this period shows no signs of early circulation, suggesting that it did not have the time and space to manifest itself inside the capital publicly. Moreover, the positive memory of the Isaurian rulers received the second wind from the top of the state with the revival of iconoclasm in 815 and remained relatively intact in Constantinople at least until the death of the last iconoclast emperor Theophilos (829-42). Further evidence of public discourse in the early years after Theophilos' death reveals notable silence about any emperor, and it is argued that the extraordinary case of public humiliation of Constantine V's remains (c. 866-7) was the earliest public condemnation of an iconoclast ruler.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Idol and Idolatry
- Author
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Boldrick, Stacy
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The aesthetics of censorship and the Russian avant-garde : abstraction beyond art
- Author
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Kociałkowska, Kamila and Blakesley, Rosalind Polly
- Subjects
709.47 ,Censorship ,Soviet art ,Russian avant-garde ,Rodchenko ,Stepanova ,Malevich ,Kruchenykh ,Glavlit ,USSR in Construction ,Avant-garde books ,10 years of Uzbekistan ,Photographic defacement ,Stalinist art ,Journal design ,Photobook ,Abstraction ,Bespredmetnost' ,Constructivism ,Suprematism ,Group of Painterly Plastic Realism ,Defacement ,Eduard Krimmer ,Leningrad school ,Iconoclasm ,Anna Leporskaia ,Vera Ermolaeva ,Nikolai Suetin ,Konstantin Rozhdestvenskii - Abstract
This thesis reconsiders the art of the Russian avant-garde by exploring its engagement with, influence from and contribution towards an unconventional area of culture: censorship. Although extensive research has already considered the way artists such as Malevich, Rodchenko and Stepanova blurred the binaries between art and vandalism, construction and deconstruction in their work, this analysis has not yet extended to consider their engagement with institutions of censorship to its full extent. This disinclination is informed by a long-standing and resilient assumption that censorship and creativity are antithetical, mutually oppositional forces. My thesis uses extensive new archival findings to problematise this position. By questioning these binary distinctions, and searching for commonalties between art and expurgation, this project offers a new understanding of how at different points in their careers, across different media, artists borrowed, adapted or referenced the censor’s strike in complex ways. Whilst extensive research has been devoted to the ideology and institutional mechanisms of Russian censorship, its aesthetic dimensions have been largely disregarded. As a corrective to this, this project will consider case studies of visibly altered and amended works in three different media: typography, photography and painting. Case studies range from redacted texts, censored manuscripts, excised details in print journals and defaced photographs. In each case, it will be argued that the very surface and texture of censorship itself warrants a formal reading, as placeholders of enforced negations which contain a rich semantic complexity. This project adds to a growing field of research which reconsiders the interactions between avant-garde artist and institutional apparatus. Covering a chronological period from the First to the Second World War, it charts the artists’ transition from anti-establishment cultural agitators to employees of the Soviet state’s expanding art administration network. It explores the tense entente that ensued as their art was adapted and appropriated to accommodate these changing institutional allegiances. Ultimately, it illuminates a new facet of the relationship between art and its destruction during this period, and provides a new understanding of the role of the artist as a willing or willed iconoclast.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The meaning of the quest for the holy grail
- Author
-
Bendle, Mervyn
- Published
- 2023
47. Historia de dos monumentos: el ascenso del héroe, la caída de un villano y el olvido de Rodin
- Author
-
José de Nordenflycht
- Subjects
monument ,iconoclasm ,Arturo Prat ,Manuel Baquedano ,Auguste Rodin ,Anthropology ,GN1-890 ,Latin America. Spanish America ,F1201-3799 - Abstract
While Captain Arturo Prat was an early victim of the Pacific War (1879-1883), turning his defeat into a symbol of heroism, General Manuel Baquedano led the Chilean army to victory in that same war, turning his triumph into a political platform. Large commemorative monuments were built about both characters in Valparaíso and Santiago de Chile, which in the recent iconoclastic cycle have had opposite destinies, allowing us to comparatively observe the construction of meaning that derives from an image in public space, considering its historical moment of establishment, the origin of the social energy that demands it and the legitimacy of its validity. In this context, Rodin's proposal for the Prat monument appears, which was rejected, probably because the iconography of La Défense turned out to be an unbearable image for the programmatic taste of the elites. A situation of forced oblivion in Rodin's work that, in its comparative analysis with the Baquedano monument, shows us that for heritage culture the rise of a hero does not always mean the fall of a villain.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. S.W. Griffith: A Suitable Case for Indictment?
- Author
-
Finnane, Mark and Richards, Jonathan
- Subjects
- *
JUDGES , *HISTORY of colonies , *INDICTMENTS , *ICONOCLASM , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *UNIVERSITY towns - Abstract
In his 2021 book 'Truth-Telling: History, Sovereignty and the Uluru Statement', Henry Reynolds called for an inquiry into the historical record of Samuel Walker Griffith, Federation 'father' and first Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia. Reynolds' iconoclasm targeted a historical figure whose name is memorialised in a Riverina town, a Canberra suburb and a Queensland university. Reynolds charged that Griffith was morally and politically responsible for the violence carried out by an agency of the Queensland government, the Native Police. This historically grounded allegation relates to Griffith's pre-Federation Queensland political career, 1874–93, when he served intermittently as Premier, Attorney-General and Colonial Secretary. In this article we consider the historical record of S.W. Griffith as law-maker and ministerial decision-maker, asking what elements of fact and context may be brought to the important work of reckoning with a violent colonial past and its memorialisation in the present. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. El fenómeno visual del vandalismo en la protesta ciudadana contra el monumento y la memoria franquista.
- Author
-
Marín, Alba and Contreras, Fernando R.
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,COLLECTIVE memory ,SOFT power (Social sciences) ,POWER (Social sciences) ,ART theory ,PUBLIC demonstrations - Abstract
Copyright of On the W@terfront is the property of University of Barcelona, Centre de Recerca POLIS and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. ZEI ȘI IDOLI. REPREZENTĂRI ȘI SIMBOLIZĂRI ALE DIVINITĂȚII ÎN RELIGIILE ISRAELULUI ANTIC (IIa) Idolatrie și iconoclasm (premise terminologice).
- Author
-
GROZEA, LUCIAN
- Subjects
- *
ARCHAEOLOGICAL discoveries , *IDOLATRY , *ICONOCLASM , *RELIGIOUS idols , *GODS , *MONOTHEISM , *DEVOTION , *IMAGE of God , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
This article represents the first section of the second part of the study Gods and Idols. Representations and Symbolizations of the Divinity in the Religions of Ancient Israel. The subjects addressed for analysis are idolatry and iconoclasm in the context of Levantine iconography, seen from the perspective of the biblical authors, a totally tendentious, aggressive and contrary vision, in particular, to the archaeological discoveries. The Hebrew lexical fund of the MT was very rich and, later, almost doubled by the Greek version of the Old Testament text translated into the LXX (Septuagint) translation, regarding the denomination of foreign gods, idols and other representations. However, the “de facto tradition” of the Israelites contained a plastic iconography, idolatry and iconoclasm being phenomena that appeared in the post-exile period and called by scientific research “programmatic tradition”. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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