Visual typologies from the early modern to the contemporary : local contexts and global practices / edited by Lynda Klich and Tara Zanardi
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781138200135
- 1138200131
Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | MAIN LIBRARY Main Library General Collection | N8222 . M36V57 2019 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 003038-00-22 | 1000386092 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Repeating, Borrowing, and Serializing -- Staging Place -- Performing the Documentary -- Materials of Typologies -- Unmasking Stereotypes
Visual Typologies from the Early Modern to the Contemporary' investigates the pictorial representation of types from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century. Originating in longstanding visual traditions, including street crier prints and costume albums, these images share certain conventions, as they seek to convey knowledge about different peoples. The genre of the type became widespread in the early modern period, developing into a global language of identity. The essays explore diverse pictorial representations of types, customs, and dress in numerous media, including paintings, prints, postcards, photographs, and garments. Together, they reveal that the activation of typological strategies, including seriality, repetition, appropriation, and subversion has produced a universal and dynamic pictorial language. Typological images highlight the tensions between the local and the international, the specific and the communal, and similarity and difference inherent in the construction of identity. The first full-length study to treat these images as a broader genre, Visual Typologies gives voice to a marginalized form of representation. Together, the essays debunk the classification of such images as unmediated and authentic representations, offering fresh methodological frameworks to consider their meanings locally and globally, and establishing common ground about the operations of objects that sought to shape, embody, or challenge individual and collective identities