Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition (Clarendon Lectures in English) Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition (Clarendon Lectures in English) Book

Iconoclasm is not a barbaric act which takes place somewhere else but is instead a central strand of Anglo-American modernity. Our horror at the destruction of art derives in part from the fact that we did, and still do, that. This is most obviously true of England's iconoclastic century between 1538 and 1643, which stands at the core of this book.Read More

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    When we think of breaking images we assume that it happens somewhere else. We also tend to think of iconoclasts as barbaric. Iconoclasts are people like the Taliban who blew up Buddhist statues in 2001. We tend that is to look with horror on iconoclasm. This book argues instead that iconoclasm is a central strand of Anglo-American modernity. Our horror at the destruction of art derives in part from the fact that we too did and still do that. This is most obviously true of England's iconoclastic century between 1538 and 1643. That century of legislated early modern image breaking exceptional in Europe for its jurisdictional extension and duration stands at the core of this book. That's when written texts especially poems rather than visual images became our living monuments. Surely though the story of image breaking stops in the eighteenth century with its enlightened cultivation of the visual arts and the art market. Not so argues Under the Hammer: once started iconoclasm is difficult to stop. It ripples through cultures into the psyche and it ripples through history.Museums may have protected images from the iconoclast's hammer but also subject images to metaphorical iconoclasm. Aesthetics may have drawn a protective circle around the image but as it did so it also neutralised the image. The ripple effect also continues across the Atlantic into puritan culture into twentieth-century American Abstract Expressionism and into the puritan temple of modern art. That in fact is where this book starts with mid-twentieth-century abstract painting: the image has survived just but it bears the scars of a 500 year history.

  • 0199591652
  • 9780199591657
  • James Simpson
  • 30 November 2010
  • OUP Oxford
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 240
  • First Edition
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