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Silent Poetry

Silent Poetry

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Author: Nicholas Mirzoeff
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $55.00
Buy New: $3.50
You Save: $51.50 (94%)



New (10) Used (21) from $2.43

Sales Rank: 1815913

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 320
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 6.5 x 1.1

ISBN: 0691037892
Dewey Decimal Number: 305.9081620944
EAN: 9780691037899
ASIN: 0691037892

Publication Date: July 10, 1995
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: New form the publisher

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This book explores the dynamic interaction between art and the sign language of the deaf in France from the philosophes to the introduction of the sound motion picture. Nicholas Mirzoeff shows how the French Revolution transformed the ancien regime metaphor of painting as silent poetry into a nineteenth-century school of over one hundred deaf artists. Painters, sculptors, photographers, and graphic artists all emanated from the Institute for the Deaf in Paris, playing a central role in the vibrant deaf culture of the period. With the rise of Darwinism, eugenics, and race science, however, the deaf found themselves categorized as "savages," excluded and ignored by the hearing. This book is concerned with the process and history of that marginalization, the constitution of a "center" from which the abnormal could be excluded, and the vital role of visual culture within this discourse.

Based on groundbreaking archival and pictorial research, Mirzoeff's exciting and intertextual analysis of what he terms the "silent screen of deafness" produces an alternative history of nineteenth-century art that challenges canonical views of the history of art, the inheritance of the Enlightenment, and the functions, status, and meanings of visual culture itself. Fusing methodologies from cultural studies, poststructuralism and art history, his study will be important for students and scholars of art history, cultural and deaf studies, and the history of medicine, and will interest a general audience concerned with the relationship of the deaf and the larger society.

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