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Feminist Aesthetics and the Politics of Modernism
von Ewa Plonowska Ziarek
Verlag: Columbia University Press
Reihe: Columbia Themes in Philosophy, Social Criticism, and the Arts
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ISBN: 978-0-231-53090-3
Erschienen am 23.10.2012
Sprache: Englisch

Preis: 34,49 €

34,49 €
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: On Loss
1 Revolutionary Praxis and Its Melancholic Impasses
1. On Suffrage Militancy and Modernism: Femininity and Revolt
2. Melancholia
3. Woolf's Aesthetics of Potentiality
2 Female Bodies
Introduction: Rethinking the Form/Matter Divide in Feminist Politics and Aesthetics
4. Abstract Commodity Form and Bare Life
5. Damaged Materialities in Political Struggles and Aesthetic Innovations
3 Toward a Feminine Aesthetics of Renaissance
6. The Enigma of Nella Larsen: Letters
Notes
Index



Ewa Ziarek fully articulates a feminist aesthetics, focusing on the struggle for freedom in women's literary and political modernism and the devastating impact of racist violence and sexism. She examines the contradiction between women's transformative literary and political practices and the oppressive realities of racist violence and sexism, and she situates these tensions within the entrenched opposition between revolt and melancholia in studies of modernity and within the friction between material injuries and experimental aesthetic forms. Ziarek's political and aesthetic investigations concern the exclusion and destruction of women in politics and literary production and the transformation of this oppression into the inaugural possibilities of writing and action. Her study is one of the first to combine an in-depth engagement with philosophical aesthetics, especially the work of Theodor W. Adorno, with women's literary modernism, particularly the writing of Virginia Woolf and Nella Larsen, along with feminist theories on the politics of race and gender. By bringing seemingly apolitical, gender-neutral debates about modernism's experimental forms together with an analysis of violence and destroyed materialities, Ziarek challenges both the anti-aesthetic subordination of modern literature to its political uses and the appreciation of art's emancipatory potential at the expense of feminist and anti-racist political struggles.


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