Vision and society : towards a sociology and anthropology from art

Bibliographic Information

Vision and society : towards a sociology and anthropology from art

John Clammer

(Routledge advances in sociology, 124)

Routledge, 2014

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Note

Includes bibliographical references ( p. [194]-212) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The sociology of art is now an established sub-discipline of sociology. But little work has been done to explore the implications not of society on art, but of art on the nature and principles of sociology itself. Vision and Society explores the ways in which art (here mainly understood as visual art) structures in fundamental ways the constitution of society, the relations between societies and the ways in which society and culture should be theorized. Building initially on an unfulfilled project by the French sociologist of art Nathalie Heinich to derive a sociology from art, this book pushes this idea in unconventional directions. Rethinking the relationships between the study of art and the study of sociology and anthropology, this book explores how this rethinking might impact sociological theory in general, and certain aspects of it in particular - especially the study of social movements, social change, the urban, the constitution of space and the ways in which human social relationships are mediated and expressed.

Table of Contents

Part I: Revisioning Art and Society 1. For a Sociology and Anthropology from Art 2. Social Aesthetics/Sociological Aesthetics 3. Art and Social Transformation: Challenges to the Discourse and Practice of Human Development 4. The Aesthetics of Social Change 5. The Aesthetics of the Urban: Visual Anthropology, Space, Place and Public Culture 6. Aesthetics Beyond Art: Conviviality and Social Imagination 7. Art Movements as Social Movements 8. The Migration of the Image: Art and the Politics and Sociology of Space Part II: Cases in Point 9. Modernism, the Colonial and the Negotiation of Representation: the Bauhaus in Asia 10. Art in the Colonial Encounter: Cultural Imperialism, Symbolic Resistance, and the Creation of Modern Korean Art 11. Rethinking the Sociology of Japanese Visual Culture: Historical Amnesia, Popular Culture and Contemporary Art in Japan

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