- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Arts
- > general things about arts
Full Description
Performative Representation of Working-Class Laborers: They Work Hard
for the Money is a transdisciplinary anthology intersecting art theory
praxis, comparative literature, film & media studies, performance art,
ethnic studies, gender studies, age & aging, geography, and labor
studies. The book investigates and analyzes artwork created by artists or
collectives working within the dialogue of Postmodernism and current
global arts production. The focus on performative aspect of labor
as art and affect becomes more sensate and less about the exploited body
of labourers, liberating the representation of waged bodies and
further diversifying the field of Working-Class Studies.
Contents
1. Introduction.- 2. Performative Representations of Working Class Labour as Language Games - Jennifer Vanderpool.- 3. "Just coal seams and heartbroken miners" - Poetic Representations of the 1984/85 Miners' Strike in (Post-) Industrial South Yorkshire - Ryan Bramley.- 4. The Feminine Mystique and Reproduction Work: Anarchiving Labour Representation at EYE Film Museum - Paula Albuquerque.- 5. Have You Ever Heard of Surplus Value? The Hard Work of Representing Sex Work - PJ Starr.- 6. Precarious, Heroes and The Art of Cleaning: Reading "Cleaning Women." - Annika Olsson.- 7. 'Raising the Red Rag' - Recontextualizing Working Class Women's Labour through Nightcleaners (1975) and '36 to '77 (1978) - Colin Gardner.- 8. The opposite of looking is not invisibility. The opposite of yellow is not gold - Hu'o'ng Ngô & Hông-Ȃn Tru'o'ng.- 9. You Don't Have to Believe Me - Farrah Karapetian.- 10. Real Work: Affective Labour and Reality Television. - Alexis Hudgins.- 11. Political Remix Video and the Working Class: Broadcasting Voices of Resistance - Diran Lyons.- 12. Puffins, Porgs, Labour, and Lightsabers: Production and Consumption of Cultural Space on the Skellig Coast of Ireland - Jake Rowlett.