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Alienation Effects Performance And Selfmanagement In Yugoslavia 194591 Branislav Jakovljevi

  • SKU: BELL-5872682
Alienation Effects Performance And Selfmanagement In Yugoslavia 194591 Branislav Jakovljevi
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Alienation Effects Performance And Selfmanagement In Yugoslavia 194591 Branislav Jakovljevi instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Michigan Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.96 MB
Pages: 382
Author: Branislav Jakovljević
ISBN: 9780472073146, 0472073141
Language: English
Year: 2016

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Alienation Effects Performance And Selfmanagement In Yugoslavia 194591 Branislav Jakovljevi by Branislav Jakovljević 9780472073146, 0472073141 instant download after payment.

In the 1970s, Yugoslavia emerged as a dynamic environment for conceptual and performance art. At the same time, it pursued its own form of political economy of socialist self-management. Alienation Effects argues that a deep relationship existed between the democratization of the arts and industrial democracy, resulting in a culture difficult to classify. The book challenges the assumption that the art emerging in Eastern Europe before 1989 was either “official” or “dissident” art; and shows that the break up of Yugoslavia was not a result of “ancient hatreds” among its peoples but instead came from the distortion and defeat of the idea of self-management.
The case studies include mass performances organized during state holidays; proto-performance art, such as the 1954 production of Waiting for Godot in a former concentration camp in Belgrade; student demonstrations in 1968; and body art pieces by Gina Pane, Joseph Beuys, Marina Abramovic, and others. Alienation Effects sheds new light on the work of well-known artists and scholars, including early experimental poetry by Slavoj Žižek, as well as performance and conceptual artists that deserve wider, international attention.

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