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Objects of Feminism
Stockholm University of the Arts.
2017 (English)Book (Other academic) [Artistic work]
Abstract [en]

The volume Objects of Feminism, edited by Maija Timonen and Josefine Wikström, Helsinki 2017, includes contributions by Hannah Black, Rose-Anne Gush, Lizzie Homersham, Nina Power, Hannah Proctor, Maija Timonen, Cara Tolmie and Josefine Wikström.

Objects of feminism are the subject/object relations of contemporary capitalism; chunks of fleshed-out knowledge, dead and living bodies invested with ideologies and more. The contributors to this book approach feminism from a range of angles, relating to its artistic, philosophical and political significance. Their texts dislodge “the object” from some of its current moorings, putting it to various uses as a prism or vanishing mediator for the energies animating each text.

Questioning the privileged status of the object in feminist discourse, Nina Power makes a case for a feminism of the void. Hannah Proctor writes about the ideologies that have animated the objects Charlotte Corday’s skull and Ulrike Meinhof’s brain, and with this opens out a perspective on the historically constructed nature of gender. Maija Timonen uses the head transplant as a metaphor for the rise of the populist right, a travesty of the social body living in a state of incomplete ecstasy. Cara Tolmie’s performance transcript takes fragments of songs and uses them as conduits for a discussion on community and healing. Lizzie Homersham writes about hearts, objectification of emotions and homesickness. Hannah Black has written a poem about three men and an untold number of women. Josefine Wikström critiques Object Oriented Ontology, exploring how feminist art practices could provide a counterpoint to it. Rose-Anne Gush analyses Elfriede Jelinek’s Die Liebhaberinnen, arguing that Jelinek’s brutal and object-like language serves to denaturalise and challenge the “fated” appearance of the life stories of the book’s protagonists.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Helsinki: University of the Arts Helsinki , 2017. , p. 128
Series
Art Theoretical Writings From the Academy of Fine Arts
Keywords [en]
feminism, object, critique, contemporary, psychoanalysis, Marx, Kant, Charlotte Corday, performance, labour
National Category
Humanities and the Arts
Research subject
Artistic practices
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:uniarts:diva-847ISBN: 9789527131329 (print)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:uniarts-847DiVA, id: diva2:1536592
Available from: 2021-03-11 Created: 2021-03-11 Last updated: 2021-03-22Bibliographically approved

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CiteExportLink to record
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Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
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  • Other style
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Language
  • de-DE
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  • en-US
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Output format
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