Heterochrony

How do current debates about the need for a 鈥済lobal,鈥 鈥渨orld,鈥 鈥渢ransnational,鈥 etc., art history relate to the discipline鈥檚 temporal organization? The historicist structure of Western art history with its teleologically inflected narrative seems increasingly inadequate to include the varied forms of time observed by different cultures. We will discuss how the radically different experiences of time might be related to one another. What are the strengths and weaknesses of translation as the 鈥渂ridge鈥 between peoples and temporalities? Can the discipline proceed without a dominant temporal paradigm with which times and cultures are compared? Must that be the time of those cultures and economies that dominate the political present?

Readings

  • Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, 鈥淩eflections on World Art History,鈥 Circulations in the Global History of Art, ed. Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, Catherine Dossin, and Beatrice Joyeux-Prunel (London: Ashgate. 2015), 23-45.
  • James Elkins, 鈥淎fterwords,鈥 Circulations in the Global History of Art, 203-229.
  • Elkins, 鈥淎rt History as a Global Discipline,鈥 Is Art History Global? (London: Routledge, 2007), 2-23.
  • Peter Stallybrass, 鈥淢arx鈥檚 Coat,鈥 in Consumption: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences ed. Daniel Miller (London: Routledge, 2001)听4 vols., I, 311-332.
  • Monica Juneja and Margrit Pernau, 鈥淟ost in Translation? Transcending Boundaries in Comparative History鈥 Comparative听and听Transnational History听听ed. Heinz-Gerhard Haupt and Jurgen Kocka (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2009), 105-129.

This event has passed.

18 May 2016

91制片厂, Somerset House, Strand, London

Citations