Skip to product information
1 of 1

Toppling Things as Memorial Contestation

Publisher:

Regular price $140.00
Regular price $140.00 Sale price $140.00
Sold out
Following the murder of George Floyd in 2020, monuments became a focal point: protestors toppled or spray-painted them, even danced on them. These politically, visually, and emotionally potent even...
Read More
  • 09 January 2025
View Product Details
Following the murder of George Floyd in 2020, monuments became a focal point: protestors toppled or spray-painted them, even danced on them. These politically, visually, and emotionally potent events may have looked instantaneous, yet frequently sprang from years of activism, as well as protracted political and academic debate. Toppling Things challenges stereotypical notions monument topplings as riotous, spontaneous, or irrational. Bringing together the ideas and emotions, the uncertainty and convictions, of artists, activists, and academics, the volume rejects a neatly tied-up, distant narrative. As it sheds light on the global, personal, immediate, and historical processes around the fall of a monument, the volume engages directly with the complexity of toppling activism and monument removal as a form of lived experience.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $140.00
Pages: 358
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Thamyris/Intersecting: Place, Sex and Race
Publication Date: 09 January 2025
ISBN: 9789004712638
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Tomas Macsotay is a Senior Lecturer at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, holding a PhD on eighteenth-century sculpture (Amsterdam, 2008). His six books and edited collections include, The Hurt(ful) Body. Performing and Beholding Pain (2017) and Recepción de Richard Wagner y Vanguardia en las Artes Españolas (2024).

Nausikaä El-Mecky is tenure-track professor in Art History & Visual Culture at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona. Since her PhD (Cambridge 2013) she has been developing her self-defined field of “dangerous images,” e.g., in the monograph The Creation of Dangerous Images in Iconoclasm, (Routledge, forthcoming).