Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover Page
- Half Title page
- Series Title page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Firing the Canon
- 1 About Canons and Culture Wars
- Theoretical Models for the Critique of the Canon: Ideology and Myth
- What Is the Canon — Structurally?
- Psycho-Symbolic Investment in the Canon, or, Being Childish about Artists
- Notes
- 2 Differencing Feminism’s encounter with the canon
- Three Positions
- Position one
- Position two
- Position three
- About Difference and Différance
- Thinking about Women . . . Artists
- Notes
- Part II Reading against the Grain: Reading for . . .
- 3 The Ambivalence of the Maternal Body Re/drawing Van Gogh
- A Feminist Reading of Van Gogh?
- Bending Women
- Inside a Studio behind the Vicarage in Nuenen
- Sexuality and Representation
- What Are They Really Talking about?
- Class, Sexuality and Animality
- Freud, Van Gogh and the Wolf Man: Mater and Nanny
- Who’s Seeing Whose Mother? Feminist Desire and the Case of Van Gogh
- Notes
- 4 Fathers of Modern Art: Mothers of Invention Cocking a leg at Toulouse-Lautrec
- Late-Coming and Premature Departure
- Debasement and Desire: Registers of Social and Sexual Difference
- Looking up to Dad
- When Small Is Not Enough
- Whose [Who’s] Missing [The] Phallus? What’s in the Gloves?
- Deconstructing the Derrière: The Physical Other
- Loving Women
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Part III Heroines: Setting Women in the Canon
- 5 The Female Hero and the Making of a Feminist Canon Artemisia Gentileschi’s representations of Susanna and Judith
- Seeing the Artist or Reading the Picture?
- Feminists and Art History: What Women?
- Susanna and the Elders
- Trauma, Memory and the Relief of Representation
- Decapitation or Castration: Judith Slaying Holofernes
- Notes
- 6 Feminist Mythologies and Missing Mothers Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Brontë, Artemisia Gentileschi and Cleopatra
- A Feminist Myth of the Twentieth Century: Murdered Creativity and the Female Body
- Lucy Snowe Meets Cleopatra: The Resistant Feminist Reader and the Female Body
- Missing Mothers: Inscriptions in the Feminine: Cleopatra
- Desiring difference
- Pleasuring the look
- Mourning the mother
- Seeing into the dark core and not lying
- Coda: Rapish Scenes and Lucretia
- Notes
- 7 Revenge Lubaina Himid and the making of new narratives for new histories
- A Post-Colonial Feminist Revenge on the Canon?
- On Some Painting in Revenge
- History Painting
- On Mourning and Melancholia
- Covenant Versus Terrorism
- Notes
- Part IV Who Is the Other?
- 8 Some Letters on Feminism, Politics and Modern Art When Edgar Degas shared a space with Mary Cassatt at the Suffrage Benefit Exhibition, New York 1915
- Letter I: On the Question of I and Non-I
- Letter II: On the Social Other
- Letter III: On the Jouissance of the Other
- Letter IV: On the Mortality of the Other
- Letter V: On the Exhibition with the Other
- Notes
- 9 A Tale of Three Women Seeing in the dark, seeing double, at least, with Manet
- Introduction: Laure, Jeanne and Berthe
- Berthe
- Jeanne
- Black Venus
- A portrait?
- The painting
- Laure
- The painting
- The nude
- The failed legacy
- Framed
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Epilogue
- Bibliography
- Index
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