Good Looking: Essays on the Virtue of Images Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Good Looking: Essays on the Virtue of Images Book

In a world with an ever-increasing number of visual images bombarding our every moment, art historian Barbara Maria Stafford wants readers to face the future with a more practiced and educated visual vocabulary. In Good Looking, Stafford begins by positioning contemporary culture in historical context. She compares the current fin-de-siƩcle anxiety and excitement about changing modes of communication and transfer of information with that of the Enlightenment. She likens 18th-century wonder cabinets to virtual reality and traces the complications of seeing versus believing to a history of mistrust of visual media. The 12 essays that comprise the book focus on visual information's continued low status in culture even as its impact continually increases. In the hopes of beginning to change this, Stafford organized a symposium in 1993, "Imaging the Body: Art and Science in Modern Culture." She "wanted to find out if past modes of visualizing the invisible physical and mental processes had any current relevance." In other words, it might be wise to take a look at our inherited relationships to what we learn and understand through visuals because, thanks in part to the Internet, this medium is becoming even more pervasive. --Jennifer Cohen Read More

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  • Product Description

    "Good Looking constitutes an important and permanent contribution to the growing critique of text-driven post-structuralist critical practice as an efficacious tool for talking about visible and visual artifacts in this culture." -- David Hickey, Associate Professor of Art Criticism and Theory, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

    Building on the arguments of her previous books, Body Criticism (1991) and Artful Science (1994), Good Looking challenges the reflexive identification of images with vice. Today rampant criticism, both inside and outside the academy, condemns the immoralities of aesthetic illusion, museum display, cable televison, and hypermedia. Believing with the American pragmatists that it is harder to do than to denounce, Barbara Stafford urges imagists to abandon Foucault's bankrupt paradigm of verbal combat. Instead of more "improving" theoretical discourse, she calls for developing a positive visual praxis on the interpretive ruins of linguistic postmodernism. Not deconstructive autopsy, but demonstrating the historical virtues of visualization for the emergent era of computerism is the task at hand. These twelve essays meditate on the stunning implications of a global shift toward vision and visionary modalities. Apparatus changes, but the basic questions endure. Machine dreams flowing from laser disks, video tapes, CD-ROMs, and magnetic disks are transforming educational, medical, and legal institutions as well as on-line society at large. Organized around three major themes --- the explosion of optical information, the urgency of inventing an imagined interdiscipline, and the ethical dilemmas of technological transparency --- these pieces connect a disappearing lens culture to the digital diaphanousness of the twenty-first century. The essays: Introduction: Visual Pragmatism for a Virtual World. Enlightenment / Re-Enlightenment. The Visualization of Knowledge. Display and the Rhetoric of Corruption. The Eighteenth Century at the End of Modernity. The New Imagist. Practicing Vision. Making Images Real. Desperately Seeking Connections. The Natural History of Design. An Image of One's Own. Aesthetical Ethics. Medical Ethics as Post-Modern Aesthetics. Picturing Ambiguity. Difficult Content, or the Pleasures of Viewing Pain.

  • 0262193698
  • 9780262193696
  • BM Stafford
  • 30 September 1996
  • MIT Press
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 259
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