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Inanimate Abjections

Permanent Link: http://ncf.sobek.ufl.edu/NCFE003275/00001

Material Information

Title: Inanimate Abjections Configuring Identity in the Work of Hans Bellmer, Cindy Sherman, and Mike Kelley
Physical Description: Book
Language: English
Creator: O'Neill-Butler, Lauren
Publisher: New College of Florida
Place of Publication: Sarasota, Fla.
Creation Date: 2003
Publication Date: 2003

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords: Bellmer, Hans
Sherman, Cindy
Kelley, Mike
Genre: bibliography   ( marcgt )
theses   ( marcgt )
government publication (state, provincial, terriorial, dependent)   ( marcgt )
born-digital   ( sobekcm )
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation

Notes

Abstract: Images of articulated dolls and mannequins in twentieth-century art raise critical questions about identity formation and comment on social, political and economic affairs. Looking at the work of three artists, I examine the ways in which modem and postmodem dolls can be interpreted by various psychoanalytic and critical theories. The pedophilic quality of Hans Bellmer's photographs satiate male fetishistic viewing and the dehumanization of the female subject. The angry, abject work of Cindy Sherman challenges the viewer with grotesque, non-gendered depictions that cannot be categorized in their resistances to the existing phallocentric Symbolic order. Mike Kelley's revival of the found stuffed animal in his installation art comments on the social economy of relationships that children have with their toys and the return of the repressed uncanny in an adult encounter with abjected objects. With a combination of aesthetic theory and criticism, as well as several theoretical accounts of identity formation from psychoanalysis, I address the advantages and disadvantages of an engagement of theory in Bellmer, Sherman, and Kelley's art. I also illustrate the ways that these works attract or repulse the viewer's gaze, and how conceptions of beauty and subjectivity have been radically altered in late-capitalist culture. My focus on theories of the abject demonstrates how ambiguity and expulsion resist the Symbolic order and how the deconstruction of the subject in art exposes rejected, uncategorized identities that challenge dualistic and oppressive subjectivism.
Statement of Responsibility: by Lauren O'Neill-Butler
Thesis: Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2003
Electronic Access: RESTRICTED TO NCF STUDENTS, STAFF, FACULTY, AND ON-CAMPUS USE
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references.
Source of Description: This bibliographic record is available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. The New College of Florida, as creator of this bibliographic record, has waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law.
Local: Faculty Sponsor: Hassold, Cris

Record Information

Source Institution: New College of Florida
Holding Location: New College of Florida
Rights Management: Applicable rights reserved.
Classification: local - S.T. 2003 O5
System ID: NCFE003275:00001

Permanent Link: http://ncf.sobek.ufl.edu/NCFE003275/00001

Material Information

Title: Inanimate Abjections Configuring Identity in the Work of Hans Bellmer, Cindy Sherman, and Mike Kelley
Physical Description: Book
Language: English
Creator: O'Neill-Butler, Lauren
Publisher: New College of Florida
Place of Publication: Sarasota, Fla.
Creation Date: 2003
Publication Date: 2003

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords: Bellmer, Hans
Sherman, Cindy
Kelley, Mike
Genre: bibliography   ( marcgt )
theses   ( marcgt )
government publication (state, provincial, terriorial, dependent)   ( marcgt )
born-digital   ( sobekcm )
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation

Notes

Abstract: Images of articulated dolls and mannequins in twentieth-century art raise critical questions about identity formation and comment on social, political and economic affairs. Looking at the work of three artists, I examine the ways in which modem and postmodem dolls can be interpreted by various psychoanalytic and critical theories. The pedophilic quality of Hans Bellmer's photographs satiate male fetishistic viewing and the dehumanization of the female subject. The angry, abject work of Cindy Sherman challenges the viewer with grotesque, non-gendered depictions that cannot be categorized in their resistances to the existing phallocentric Symbolic order. Mike Kelley's revival of the found stuffed animal in his installation art comments on the social economy of relationships that children have with their toys and the return of the repressed uncanny in an adult encounter with abjected objects. With a combination of aesthetic theory and criticism, as well as several theoretical accounts of identity formation from psychoanalysis, I address the advantages and disadvantages of an engagement of theory in Bellmer, Sherman, and Kelley's art. I also illustrate the ways that these works attract or repulse the viewer's gaze, and how conceptions of beauty and subjectivity have been radically altered in late-capitalist culture. My focus on theories of the abject demonstrates how ambiguity and expulsion resist the Symbolic order and how the deconstruction of the subject in art exposes rejected, uncategorized identities that challenge dualistic and oppressive subjectivism.
Statement of Responsibility: by Lauren O'Neill-Butler
Thesis: Thesis (B.A.) -- New College of Florida, 2003
Electronic Access: RESTRICTED TO NCF STUDENTS, STAFF, FACULTY, AND ON-CAMPUS USE
Bibliography: Includes bibliographical references.
Source of Description: This bibliographic record is available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. The New College of Florida, as creator of this bibliographic record, has waived all rights to it worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law.
Local: Faculty Sponsor: Hassold, Cris

Record Information

Source Institution: New College of Florida
Holding Location: New College of Florida
Rights Management: Applicable rights reserved.
Classification: local - S.T. 2003 O5
System ID: NCFE003275:00001

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