Fr. 77.00

Art after the Hipster - Identity Politics, Ethics and Aesthetics

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

This book examines the complexities of the hipster through the lens of art history and cultural theory, from Charles Baudelaire's flâneur to the contemporary "creative" borne from creative industries policies. It claims that the recent ubiquity of hipster culture has led many artists to confront their own significance, responding to the mass artification of contemporary life by de-emphasising the formal and textual deconstructions so central to the legacies of modern and postmodern art. In the era of creative digital technologies, long held characteristics of art such as individual expression, innovation, and alternative lifestyle are now features of a flooded and fast-paced global marketplace. Against the idea that artists, like hipsters, are the "foot soldiers of capitalism", the institutionalized networks that make up the contemporary art world are working to portray a view of art that is less a discerning exercise in innovative form-making than a social platform-a forum for populist aesthetic pleasures or socio-political causes. It is in this sense that the concept of the hipster is caught up in age-old debates about the relation between ethics and aesthetics, examined here in terms of the dynamics of global contemporary art.

Sommario

1. Introduction: Caring Too Much and Not Enough.- 2. The Twenty-First-Century Hipster.- 3. The Postmodern Hipster.- 4. The Hipster as an Entrepreneur of the Self.- 5. Conclusion.

Info autore

Wes Hill lectures in Art History and Visual Culture at Southern Cross University, Australia. Previous publications include Emily Floyd: The Dawn (2014) and How Folklore Shaped Modern Art (2016).

Riassunto

Examines the hipster in terms of fundamental debates about aesthetics and ethics in contemporary art and visual culture
Investigates the unique paradoxes of the term “hipster”, which is at once an aesthetic stereotype and an ideological mode of deflection
Historicises the hipster in order to grapple with issues of cultural appropriation, identity politics, aesthetic discernment and critical practice, drawing from the legacies of the flâneur, the avant-garde, and the beatnik to illuminate the cultural changes effected by global capitalism and digital technologies

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Wes Hill
Editore Springer, Berlin
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Copertina rigida
Pubblicazione 06.11.2017
 
EAN 9783319685779
ISBN 978-3-31-968577-9
Pagine 150
Dimensioni 154 mm x 220 mm x 15 mm
Peso 305 g
Illustrazioni VIII, 150 p. 1 illus. in color.
Categorie Scienze sociali, diritto, economia > Sociologia > Altro

C, Culture, Popular Culture, Digital Media, Cultural Studies, Fine Arts, Cultural Theory, Fine Art, Literature, Cultural and Media Studies, Media studies: internet, digital media & society, Media studies: internet, digital media and society, Digital and New Media, Digital/New Media, Culture—Study and teaching, Fine arts: art forms, Global and International Culture, Global/International Culture

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