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E-grāmata: Media Critique in the Age of Gillray: Scratches, Scraps, and Spectres

  • Formāts: 316 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781487527754
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
  • Cena: 63,04 €*
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  • Formāts: 316 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Dec-2021
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781487527754

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Media Critique in the Age of Gillray reflects on print and paper culture of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, crafting a new approach to British visual culture.



In the late 1790s, British Prime Minister William Pitt created a crisis of representation when he pressured the British Parliament to relieve the Bank of England from its obligations to convert paper notes into coin. Paper quickly became associated with a form of limitless reproduction that threatened to dematerialize solid bodies and replace them with insubstantial shadows.

Media Critique in the Age of Gillray centres on printed images and graphic satires which view paper as the foundation for the contemporary world. Through a focus on printed, visual imagery from practitioners such as James Gillray, William Blake, John Thomas Smith, and Henry Fuseli, the book addresses challenges posed by reproductive technologies to traditional concepts of subjective agency.

Joseph Monteyne shows that the late eighteenth-century paper age’s baseless fabric set the stage for contemporary digital media’s weightless production. Engagingly written and abundantly illustrated, Media Critique in the Age of Gillray highlights the fact that graphic culture has been overlooked as an important sphere for the production of critical and self-reflective discourses around media transformations and the visual turn in British culture.

Recenzijas

"Monteynes book is scholarly, wide ranging, insightful, theoretically informed, and dense; it demands to be read patiently. The book is also well produced and lavishly illustrated with color images throughout."

- J. T. Lynch, Rutgers UniversityNewark (CHOICE) "Media Critique in the Age of Gillray provides a semiotic journey through the baseless fabric of late-eighteenth-century print culture and is worth reading, and then reading again since it provides abundant opportunities for making connections." - Amanda Lahikainen, Ogunquit Museum of American Art (The Art Bulletin)

List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Making and Unmaking the Paper World 3(22)
1 Dark Media and the Materiality of Nothing
25(42)
Dark Media and Graphic Materiality
25(10)
Negative Images: Black Paintings, Cut Pictures
35(15)
Form and Formlessness in Blake's Embedded Media
50(17)
2 Haunted Media
67(38)
Conjuring Dead Painters
70(10)
The Baseless Fabric of Print
80(9)
Dematerializing Media
89(16)
3 Good Copies, Bad Copies
105(48)
Counterfeit Masks
110(8)
Repetition with Difference
118(15)
Pairs of Portraits
133(20)
4 Social Detritus, Paper Detritus
153(64)
Blind Beggars, Ballad Sellers, and Printed Images
153(37)
Cobbling, Patching, Translating
190(11)
The Gatherer of Scraps
201(16)
Notes 217(48)
Bibliography 265(26)
Index 291
Joseph Monteyne is an associate professor in the Department of Art History, Visual Art, and Theory at the University of British Columbia.