Show simple item record

dc.date.accessioned2017-12-27T15:56:23Z
dc.date.available2017-12-27T15:56:23Z
dc.date.issued2017-11-15
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2077/54816
dc.subjectAesthetics of resistancesv
dc.subjectambiguitysv
dc.subjectwithdrawalsv
dc.titleSelf-interrupted: notes on resisting aesthetics of resistancesv
dc.type.svepartistic work
dc.contributor.creatorAlves, André
art.typeOfWorkPaper presentation – unpublished.sv
art.relation.publishedIn2nd Parse conference: Exclusion. PhD Forumsv
art.description.project“Self-interrupted: notes on resisting aesthetics of resistance” is an essay submitted to and presented at the 2nd Parse conference: On Exclusion. “Self-interrupted: notes on resisting aesthetics of resistance” explored how in the relation between aesthetics and resistance, images and performance of action of wilful refusal, of self-exclusion (such as the act of striking) tend to be read as positive. There are however, forms of exclusion of the self (for instance, of pathological states, depressive states, cognitive degenerative states) that not only are acted from the self, but on the self, as a deprivation of the possession of will and framed in negative terms. ”Self-interrupted” analyses the ambiguous relation between aesthetics and resistance, by looking at some examples from George Perec and Ingmar Bergman, as to examine the stabilization of representation systems and values, and through them, develop questions about the understanding of resistance. Question such as, how can artistic research expose the ambiguities inherent to relation between aesthetics of resistance and the role of the self? How can it provide cues to analyse where aesthetics of resistance serves the purpose of exclusion? To what extent such aesthetic claim to acts and values, already implicates practices of reparation and caresses of solidarity?sv
art.description.summary“Self-interrupted: notes on resisting aesthetics of resistance” is an essay submitted to and presented at the 2nd Parse conference: On Exclusion. “Self-interrupted: notes on resisting aesthetics of resistance” explored how in the relation between aesthetics and resistance, images and performance of action of wilful refusal, of self-exclusion (such as the act of striking) tend to be read as positive. There are however, forms of exclusion of the self (for instance, of pathological states, depressive states, cognitive degenerative states) that not only are acted from the self, but on the self, as a deprivation of the possession of will and framed in negative terms. ”Self-interrupted” analyses the ambiguous relation between aesthetics and resistance, by looking at some examples from George Perec and Ingmar Bergman, as to examine the stabilization of representation systems and values, and through them, develop questions about the understanding of resistance. Question such as, how can artistic research expose the ambiguities inherent to relation between aesthetics of resistance and the role of the self? How can it provide cues to analyse where aesthetics of resistance serves the purpose of exclusion? To what extent such aesthetic claim to acts and values, already implicates practices of reparation and caresses of solidarity?sv
art.relation.urihttp://parsejournal.com/conference/parse-conference-2017/research-forum/sv


Files in this item

Thumbnail

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record