ABSTRACT

Expanding upon longstanding concerns in cultural history about the relation of text and image, this book explores how ideas move across and between expressive forms. The contributions draw from art and architectural history, film, theater, performance studies, and social and cultural history to identify and dissect the role that the visual and performing arts can play in the experience and understanding of the past.The essays highlight the role of oral history in the documentation of the visual and performing arts. They share a common set of questions as they explore, firmly grounded in their distinctive disciplinary standpoints, the circuit of word, gesture, object in the formation and reproduction of knowledge, identity, and community. Blending theory and case study, they cover subjects such as the response of artists to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission; violence in Columbia and Mexico and the Balkan Wars; the circuit of sexual desire in contemporary art and photography; and sites of collective and personal memory, including the Internet, the urban landscape, family photographs, and hip hop.Stressing the relationship of media to the formation of collective memory, the volume explores how media intertextuality creates overlapping repertoires for understanding the past and the present. Scholars of art history, media and cultural studies, literature, and performance studies will all find this work a valuable resource.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Performing the archive

chapter 2|24 pages

Resonating Testimonies from/in the Space of Death

Performing Buenaventura’s La maestra

chapter 3|26 pages

Truth and Consequences

Art in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission

chapter 4|22 pages

Precarious Boundaries

Affect, mise-en-scène, and the senses in Theodorus Angelopoulos’s Balkans epic

chapter 5|16 pages

Stratum and Resonance

Displacement in the work of Renée Green

chapter 6|19 pages

Cities Memory Voices Collage

chapter 7|36 pages

Eros in the Studio

chapter 8|25 pages

Muscle Memory

Performing embodied knowledge

chapter 9|21 pages

“Hope . . . Teach, Yaknowhati’Msayin”

Freestylin knowledge through Detroit hiphop

chapter 10|13 pages

Les Gammes

Making visible the representative modern man

chapter 11|19 pages

Composite Past

Photography and family memories in Brazil (1850-1950)

chapter 12|16 pages

Memories of Mammy

chapter 13|16 pages

Official Art, Official Publics

Public sculpture under the Federal Art-in-Architecture Program since 1972

chapter 14|18 pages

Private Reflections/Public Matters

Public art in the city