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Touching Surfaces

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Who isn’t seduced by the idea of an affinity between aging and aesthetics? Yet, when does aging truly begin? What attributes does the aesthetic embrace? Looking into startling photographic art of t...
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  • 01 January 2009
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Who isn’t seduced by the idea of an affinity between aging and aesthetics? Yet, when does aging truly begin? What attributes does the aesthetic embrace? Looking into startling photographic art of the past three decades, this book is prompted by such questions and turns them into a meditation on how aesthetics mediates our relation to time.
The photographic approach of the corporeal is at the center of the book. Within a phenomenological framework, Cristofovici brings into focus the physical and the psychic body to read aging as a process of change and becoming over time. Her understanding of aging sees beyond difference into larger patterns of perceptions that we share.
Offering valuable insights into aging as a process of subject construction, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of visual culture, photography, art history, age studies, and theories of knowledge. This cross-disciplinary study that puts theory to the test of life’s and art’s paradoxes in an evocative style will also appeal to a wider readership interested in how photography and aging illuminate each other.
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Price: $92.00
Pages: 216
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Consciousness, Literature and the Arts
Publication Date: 01 January 2009
ISBN: 9789042025134
Format: Paperback
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Anca Cristofovici is Professor of American Literature and Photography in France. She is the author of John Hawkes. L’enfant et le cannibale (1997) and has contributed to Figuring Age: Women, Bodies, Generations (1999) and Intersections: Essays on Richard Powers (2008). Her essays have appeared in journals in Europe and the United States, and she has written for and curated photography exhibitions. Her work has been recognized by a Rockefeller Fellowship.