Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice

<p>Rather than being located in a field of art that addresses genocide through assumptions connected with identity issues or activism, this thesis of an artist’s exploration of artistic response to genocide in post World War II art practice, is informed by the emerging field of genocide schola...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kyriakides, Y
Other Authors: Archer, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
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author Kyriakides, Y
author2 Archer, M
author_facet Archer, M
Kyriakides, Y
author_sort Kyriakides, Y
collection OXFORD
description <p>Rather than being located in a field of art that addresses genocide through assumptions connected with identity issues or activism, this thesis of an artist’s exploration of artistic response to genocide in post World War II art practice, is informed by the emerging field of genocide scholarship. Seeing a parallelism between the concerns of genocide scholars and artists who respond to genocide, this thesis is an interdisciplinary study of art positioned alongside the field of genocide scholarship, as theorised by scholars such as Donald Bloxham and A. Dirk Moses. In addressing genocide through broader historical trends, periods and structures, it assumes that artists who respond to genocide share with genocide scholars a concern about genocide at a secondary level and share the potential to create illumination in the field. This thesis explores art practices that address genocide conceptually through structure and material. The central claim of this thesis is that recent and contemporary art practices, here discussed, show a concern to respond to genocide as an ethical response, and that they do so by engaging with the complexity of abstract issues such as complicity and agency. The initial analysis of Adorno’s discourse on ethics, as it relates to response in art, sets up a level of complexity for two further investigations that interrogate the discourses of victim representation and lens-based documents of genocide through ethics and agency. Together these provide an analytical framework for the project. Close readings informed by genocide scholarship, of art practices including those of Jimmie Durham and Francis Alÿs, take forward notions in the existing critical field. These readings yield not only the evidence that demonstrates a commitment to creating ethically based art through conceptually informed practice, in artists responding to genocide, but also the value of a cultural critique that is informed by genocide scholarship.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:9eb26a2a-13ed-42d6-80f1-e353c35c9d7f2022-03-27T00:51:55ZArt after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practiceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:9eb26a2a-13ed-42d6-80f1-e353c35c9d7fvisual culturesArtgenocide scholarshipcultural studiescontemporary Western art practicecritical theoryart historygenocidegenocide studiesEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2012Kyriakides, YArcher, M<p>Rather than being located in a field of art that addresses genocide through assumptions connected with identity issues or activism, this thesis of an artist’s exploration of artistic response to genocide in post World War II art practice, is informed by the emerging field of genocide scholarship. Seeing a parallelism between the concerns of genocide scholars and artists who respond to genocide, this thesis is an interdisciplinary study of art positioned alongside the field of genocide scholarship, as theorised by scholars such as Donald Bloxham and A. Dirk Moses. In addressing genocide through broader historical trends, periods and structures, it assumes that artists who respond to genocide share with genocide scholars a concern about genocide at a secondary level and share the potential to create illumination in the field. This thesis explores art practices that address genocide conceptually through structure and material. The central claim of this thesis is that recent and contemporary art practices, here discussed, show a concern to respond to genocide as an ethical response, and that they do so by engaging with the complexity of abstract issues such as complicity and agency. The initial analysis of Adorno’s discourse on ethics, as it relates to response in art, sets up a level of complexity for two further investigations that interrogate the discourses of victim representation and lens-based documents of genocide through ethics and agency. Together these provide an analytical framework for the project. Close readings informed by genocide scholarship, of art practices including those of Jimmie Durham and Francis Alÿs, take forward notions in the existing critical field. These readings yield not only the evidence that demonstrates a commitment to creating ethically based art through conceptually informed practice, in artists responding to genocide, but also the value of a cultural critique that is informed by genocide scholarship.</p>
spellingShingle visual cultures
Art
genocide scholarship
cultural studies
contemporary Western art practice
critical theory
art history
genocide
genocide studies
Kyriakides, Y
Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title_full Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title_fullStr Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title_full_unstemmed Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title_short Art after Auschwitz. Dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post World War II art practice
title_sort art after auschwitz dimensions of ethics and agency in responses to genocide in post world war ii art practice
topic visual cultures
Art
genocide scholarship
cultural studies
contemporary Western art practice
critical theory
art history
genocide
genocide studies
work_keys_str_mv AT kyriakidesy artafterauschwitzdimensionsofethicsandagencyinresponsestogenocideinpostworldwariiartpractice