Full Description
The Surviving Image, originally published in French in 2002, is the result of Georges Didi-Huberman's extensive research into the life and work of foundational art historian Aby Warburg. Warburg envisioned an art history that engaged with anthropology, psychoanalysis, and philosophy in order to understand the "life" of images. Drawing on a wide range of Warburg's unpublished letters and diaries, Didi-Huberman demonstrates unequivocally the complexity and importance of Warburg's ideas and the ways in which his legacy was both distorted and diffused as art history became a "humanistic" discipline. The Surviving Image takes Warburg as its main subject but also addresses broader questions regarding art historians' conceptions of time, memory, and symbols and the relationship between art and the rational and irrational forces of the psyche.
Faithfully and thoughtfully translated by Harvey Mendelsohn, this first English-language edition of Didi-Huberman's masterful study of Warburg is a stirring and significant treatise on the philosophical nature of art history.
Contents
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Translator's Note
Chapter 1: The Image as Phantom: Survival of Forms and Impurities of Time
Chapter 2: The Image as Pathos: Lines of Fracture and Formulas of Intensity
Chapter 3: The Image as Symptom: Fossils in Motion and Montages of Memory
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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