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  News and Resources online for Visual Anthropology

New Books

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2feb
Ilisa Barbash and Lucien Taylor (eds)
The Cinema of Robert Gardner
Berg Publisher, 2007
20ago
Joram ten Brink (eds)
Building Bridges. The Cinema of Jean Rouch
Wallflower Press, 2007
Sharon R. Sherman and Mikel J. Koven (eds)
Folklore/Cinema. Popular Film as Vernacular Culture
Utah State University Press, 2007
Alan Grossman and Aine O'Brien
Projecting Migration. Transcultural Documentary Practice
2007, Wallflower Press
Erica Segre
Intersected Identities. Strategies of Visualization in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Mexican Culture
2006, University of Minnesota Press
Jennifer Deger
Shimmering Screens. Making Media in an Aboriginal Community
2006, University of Minnesota Press
Annette Kuhn and Kirsten Emiko McAllister
Locating Memory. Photographic Acts
2006, Berghahn Books
 

All books are included in the Ethnodoc Library with a link to the Publisher website.

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Conal McCarthy
Exhibiting Maori. A History of Colonial Cultures Display
Berg Publisher, 2007

This title cannot be sold by Berg to customers in Australia and New Zealand. Customers in these countries can purchase this title from Te Papa Museum Press in New Zealand. This richly illustrated book presents a comprehensive assessment of the display of Maori culture from the nineteenth century to today. In doing so, Exhibiting Maori traces the long journey from curio to specimen, artefact, art and taonga (treasure). Drawing on extensive and groundbreaking research, Exhibiting Maori reveals for the first time the remarkable story of Maori resistance to, involvement in, and eventual capture of the display of their culture. Ranging across museums, world fairs, fine art and tourism, Exhibiting Maori fuses museum studies, anthropology, and visual and material culture to uncover a history of active Maori engagement with the colonial culture of display.


 

 

click on the cover to buy the book from Amazon

E. Edwards, C. Gosden, R. B. Philips (eds)
Sensible Objects. Colonialism, Museums, and Material Culture
Berg Publisher, 2007

This title cannot be sold by Berg to customers in Australia and New Zealand. Customers in these countries can purchase this title from Te Papa Museum Press in New Zealand.
This richly illustrated book presents a comprehensive assessment of the display of Maori culture from the nineteenth century to today. In doing so, Exhibiting Maori traces the long journey from curio to specimen, artefact, art and taonga (treasure).
Drawing on extensive and groundbreaking research, Exhibiting Maori reveals for the first time the remarkable story of Maori resistance to, involvement in, and eventual capture of the display of their culture.
Ranging across museums, world fairs, fine art and tourism, Exhibiting Maori fuses museum studies, anthropology, and visual and material culture to uncover a history of active Maori engagement with the colonial culture of display.

 

 

 

click on the cover to buy the book from Amazon

 

Howard Morphy
Becoming Art. Exploring Cross-Cultural Categories
Berg Publisher, 2007

Thirty years ago Australian Aboriginal art was little more than a footnote to world art. Today, it is considered to be an important contemporary art movement, often promoted as being connected to a deep cultural past.
Becoming Art provides a new analysis of the shifting cultural and social contexts that surround the production of Aboriginal art. Transcending the boundaries between anthropology and art history, the book draws on arguments from both disciplines to provide a unique interdisciplinary perspective that places the artists themselves at the centre of the argument.
Western art history has traditionally regarded Aboriginal art as distanced in time and place. Becoming Art uses the recent history of Aboriginal art to challenge some of the presuppositions of western art discourse and western art worlds. It argues for a more cross-cultural perspective on world art history.

 

Larissa N. Heinrich
The Afterlife of Images. Translating the Pathological Body between China and the West
Duke University Press, 2008

In 1739 China’s emperor authorized the publication of a medical text that included images of children with smallpox to aid in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease. Those images made their way to Europe, where they were interpreted as indicative of the ill health and medical backwardness of the Chinese. In the mid-nineteenth century, the celebrated Cantonese painter Lam Qua collaborated with the American medical missionary Peter Parker in the creation of portraits of Chinese patients with disfiguring pathologies, rendered both before and after surgery. Europeans saw those portraits as evidence of Western medical prowess. Within China, the visual idiom that the paintings established influenced the development of medical photography. In The Afterlife of Images, Larissa N. Heinrich investigates the creation and circulation of Western medical discourses that linked ideas about disease to Chinese identity beginning in the eighteenth century.
Combining literary studies, the history of science, and visual culture studies, Heinrich analyzes the rhetoric and iconography through which medical missionaries transmitted to the West an image of China as “sick” or “diseased.” She also examines the absorption of that image back into China through missionary activity, through the earliest translations of Western medical texts into Chinese, and even through the literature of Chinese nationalism. Heinrich argues that over time “scientific” Western representations of the Chinese body and culture accumulated a host of secondary meanings, taking on an afterlife with lasting consequences for conceptions of Chinese identity in China and beyond its borders.