ABSTRACT

First Published in 1999. For the first time gathered together in book form, here are the influential writings of Moira Roth-articles, lectures, and inter­views-on the two men who for so long embodied the very spirit of the avant­garde, Marcel Duchamp and John Cage. For almost thirty years Duchamp and Cage, who seemed to live on the border of modernism, and later, of postmodernism, alternately have fascinated, irritated, inspired, and daunted the author. Since her initial engagement with Duchamp and Cage in the early seventies, Roth increasingly focused on the work of many American artists-primarily women-only to return to Duchamp and Cage intermit­tently. At first, they were an inspiration for her writing and teaching. However, as they transformed themselves into classical figures, she came to reconsider and re-evaluate them. This collection offers a wide variety of literary forms-analytic, diaristic, art historical, and autobiographical-all of which Roth has used in her work. Collectively these writings form the subject of compelling and unique critical exchange between Moira Roth, who holds the Trefethen Chair of Art History at Mills College, Oakland, and Jonathan D.Katz, who is Chair of the Department of Gay and Lesbian Studies at City College, San Francisco.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Now and Then

part |54 pages

Essays by Roth, 1977, and Commentary by Katz, 1998

chapter |14 pages

Marcel Duchamp in America

A Self Ready-Made

chapter |20 pages

Identification

part |33 pages

Interviews by Roth About Marcel Duchamp, 1973

chapter |13 pages

John Cage on Marcel Duchamp

An Interview

chapter |5 pages

Robert Smithson on Duchamp

An Interview

chapter |6 pages

Interview with Vito Acconci

January 31, 1973, New York City

chapter |5 pages

Interview With George Segai

Febraary 26, 1973, East Brunswick, New Jersey

part |52 pages

Essays and Performance Texts by Roth, 1991–1995, Commentary by Katz, 1998

chapter |12 pages

Talking back

An exchange with marcel duchamp

chapter |7 pages

Five stories about st. john,

seven stories about st. pauline, surely there is trouble in the John cage studies paradise, and readings from today's headlines of the new york times

chapter |10 pages

Difference