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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
List of illustrations | p. x |
Preface | p. xiii |
Acknowledgements | p. xviii |
Firing the canon | |
About canons and culture wars | p. 3 |
Theoretical models for the critique of the canon: ideology and myth | p. 6 |
What is the canon - structurally? | p. 9 |
Psycho-symbolic investment in the canon, or, Being childish about artists | p. 13 |
Differencing: feminism's encounter with the canon | p. 23 |
Three positions | p. 23 |
About difference and differance | p. 29 |
Thinking about women ... Artists | p. 33 |
Reading against the grain: reading for ... | |
The ambivalence of the maternal body: re/drawing Van Gogh | p. 41 |
A feminist reading of Van Gogh? | p. 41 |
Bending women | p. 43 |
Inside a studio behind the vicarage in Nuenen | p. 46 |
Sexuality and representation | p. 50 |
What are they really talking about? | p. 53 |
Class, sexuality and animality | p. 55 |
Freud, Van Gogh and the Wolf Man: Mater and nanny | p. 57 |
Who's seeing whose mother? Feminist desire and the case of Van Gogh | p. 60 |
Fathers of modern art: mothers of invention: cocking a leg at Toulouse-Lautrec | p. 65 |
Late-coming and premature departure | p. 65 |
Debasement and desire: registers of social and sexual difference | p. 67 |
Looking up to dad | p. 70 |
When small is not enough | p. 75 |
Whose [who's] missing [the] Phallus? What's in the gloves? | p. 77 |
Deconstructing the derriere: the physical other | p. 81 |
Loving women | p. 87 |
Conclusion | p. 90 |
Heroines: setting women in the canon | |
The female hero and the making of a feminist canon: Artemisia Gentileschi's representations of Susanna and Judith | p. 97 |
Seeing the artist or reading the picture? | p. 98 |
Feminists and art history: what women? | p. 98 |
Susanna and the Elders | p. 103 |
Trauma, memory and the relief of representation | p. 108 |
Decapitation or castration: Judith Slaying Holofernes | p. 115 |
Feminist mythologies and missing mothers: Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Bronte, Artemisia Gentileschi and Cleopatra | p. 129 |
A feminist myth of the twentieth century: murdered creativity and the female body | p. 129 |
Lucy Snowe meets Cleopatra: the resistant feminist reader and the female body | p. 132 |
Missing mothers: inscriptions in the feminine: Cleopatra | p. 138 |
Coda: rapish scenes and Lucretia | p. 158 |
Revenge: Lubaina Himid and the making of new narratives for new histories | p. 169 |
A post-colonial feminist revenge on the canon? | p. 169 |
On some painting in Revenge | p. 173 |
History painting | p. 186 |
On mourning and melancholia | p. 189 |
Covenant versus terrorism | p. 191 |
Who is the other? | |
Some letters on feminism, politics and modern art: when Edgar Degas shared a space with Mary Cassatt at the Suffrage Benefit Exhibition, New York 1915 | p. 201 |
On the question of I and non-I | p. 201 |
On the social other | p. 213 |
On the jouissance of the other | p. 226 |
On the mortality of the other | p. 230 |
On the exhibition with the other | p. 234 |
A tale of three women: seeing in the dark, seeing double, at least, with Manet | p. 247 |
Introduction: Laure, Jeanne and Berthe | p. 247 |
Berthe | p. 258 |
Jeanne | p. 261 |
Laure | p. 277 |
Conclusion | p. 305 |
Epilogue | p. 317 |
Bibliography | p. 318 |
Index | p. 328 |
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved. |
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