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ISBN: PB: 9780226421186

ISBN: HB: 9780226210261

University of Chicago Press

October 2016

240 pp.

20.3x15.2 cm

8 colour plates, 28 halftones, 4 line drawings

PB:
£18,00
QTY:
HB:
£24,00
QTY:

Categories:

Beauty of a Social Problem

Photography, Autonomy, Economy

Bertolt Brecht once worried that our sympathy for the victims of a social problem can make the problem's "beauty and attraction" invisible. In "The Beauty of a Social Problem", Walter Benn Michaels explores the effort to overcome this difficulty through a study of several contemporary artist-photographers whose work speaks to questions of political economy.

Although he discusses well-known figures like Walker Evans and Jeff Wall, Michaels's focus is on a group of younger artists, including Viktoria Binschtok, Phil Chang, Liz Deschenes, and Arthur Ou. All born after 1965, they have always lived in a world where, on the one hand, artistic ambition has been synonymous with the critique of autonomous form and intentional meaning, while, on the other, the struggle between capital and labor has essentially been won by capital. Contending that the aesthetic and political conditions are connected, Michaels argues that these artists' new commitment to form and meaning is a way for them to portray the conditions that have taken US economic inequality from its lowest level, in 1968, to its highest level today. As Michaels demonstrates, these works of art, unimaginable without the postmodern critique of autonomy and intentionality, end up departing and dissenting from it in continually interesting and innovative ways.

About the Author

Walter Benn Michaels is professor of English at the University of Illinois at Chicago.

Reviews

"A shining example of how to think about art and politics without reducing either term to the other... It is a virtue of Michaels's book that it does not seek merely to be agreed with; rather, it channels the force of its examples to challenge major assumptions about what it means to engage with art in a political way, even and especially when it is beautiful" – Los Angeles Review of Books

"Michaels adroitly advocates for an acknowledgement of the economic and political structures that have influenced the development of select photographs commenting on an increasingly stratified society... Recommended" – Choice

"Remarkable... What is immediately apparent is Benn Michaels's ability to explicate the inextricable relation between neoliberal economic forms and the formal interventions of contemporary photography while avoiding the numbing obfuscation of the professional academic, the rhetorical flourishes of the art critic and the political diatribes of the militant" – Prefix Photo

"Michaels offers deft interventions in debates around concepts – such as autonomy, indexicality, intention and absorption – which have preoccupied art and... literary theorists over recent decades" – Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory