Representing the Black female subject in western art
Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
- Nelson, Charmaine (Auteur)
Titre
Representing the Black female subject in western art
Résumé
Nelson analyzes not only how, where, why and by whom black female subjects have been represented in Western art, but also what the social and cultural impacts of the colonial legacy of racialized Western representation have been. She poses questions about the concepts of production, the consequences of comsumption and more
Collection
Routledge studies on African and Black diaspora
N° ds la coll.
2
Lieu
New York, NY
Maison d’édition
Routledge
Date
2010
Nb de pages
xii, 245
Langue
Anglais
ISBN
978-0-415-87116-7
Catalogue de bibl.
WorldCat Discovery Service
Extra
Disponible en ligne: https://doi-org.proxy.bibliotheques.uqam.ca/10.4324/9780203851241
Contenu: Through an-other's eyes : white Canadian artists -- Black female subjects -- Racing childhood : representations of black girls in Canadian art -- Slavery, portraiture, and the colonial limits of Canadian art history -- The fruits of resistance : reading portrait of a Negro slave on the sly -- Tying the knot : Black female slave dress in Canada -- Coloured nude : fetishization, disguise, dichotomy -- The "hottentot venus" in Canada : modernism, censorship, and the racial limits of female sexuality -- White marble, Black bodies, and the fear of the invisible Negro : -- Signifying blackness in mid-nineteenth-century neoclassical sculpture -- Vénus Africaine : race, beauty, and African-ness -- Allegory, race, and the four continents : Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's les quatre parties du monde soutenant la sphere céleste -- Conclusion : whiteness as collective narcissism, towards a new vision.
Référence
Nelson, Charmaine. (2010). Representing the Black female subject in western art. Routledge. https://uqam-bib.on.worldcat.org/oclc/692291133
Approches et analyses
Cours
Discipline
Thématiques
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