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Political Memory And The Aesthetics Of Care The Art Of Complicity And Resistance Mihaela Mihai

  • SKU: BELL-51943516
Political Memory And The Aesthetics Of Care The Art Of Complicity And Resistance Mihaela Mihai
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Political Memory And The Aesthetics Of Care The Art Of Complicity And Resistance Mihaela Mihai instant download after payment.

Publisher: Stanford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.25 MB
Pages: 312
Author: Mihaela Mihai
ISBN: 9781503630130, 1503630137
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Political Memory And The Aesthetics Of Care The Art Of Complicity And Resistance Mihaela Mihai by Mihaela Mihai 9781503630130, 1503630137 instant download after payment.

With this nuanced and interdisciplinary work, political theorist Mihaela Mihai tackles several interrelated questions: How do societies remember histories of systemic violence? Who is excluded from such histories' cast of characters? And what are the political costs of selective remembering in the present?


Building on insights from political theory, social epistemology, and feminist and critical race theory, Mihai argues that a double erasure often structures hegemonic narratives of complex violence: of widespread, heterogeneous complicity and of "impure" resistances, not easily subsumed to exceptionalist heroic models. In dialogue with care ethicists and philosophers of art, she then suggests that such narrative reductionism can be disrupted aesthetically through practices of "mnemonic care," that is, through the hermeneutical labor that critical artists deliver—thematically and formally—within communities' space of meaning. Empirically, the book examines both consecrated and marginalized artists who tackled the memory of Vichy France, communist Romania, and apartheid South Africa. Despite their specificities, these contexts present us with an opportunity to analyze similar mnemonic dynamics and to recognize the political impact of dissenting artistic production.


Crossing disciplinary boundaries, the book intervenes in debates over collective responsibility, historical injustice, and the aesthetics of violence within political theory, memory studies, social epistemology, and transitional justice.

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