Visualizing fascism : the twentieth-century rise of the global right / Geoff Eley and Julia Adeney Thomas, editors.
"Visualizing Fascism explores various ways of tracing, displaying, viewing, and interacting with fascism, examining fascism as both a global and aesthetic phenomenon during the twentieth century. It emphasizes transnational and visual qualities in order to refigure ways of establishing visual languages, articulate commentaries on the dynamic nature of national identity, and form both supportive and challenging attitudes about the global right. In particular, this volume seeks to challenge the notion that fascism is primarily a national product of Italy, Japan, and Germany; rather it seeks to locate the rise of fascism and the global right in transnational networks connected by capitalism and imperialism. The collection contains twelve essays. In the introduction, Thomas examines the rise of global and aesthetic forms of fascism, ending with the formulation of the "portable concept of fascism"-wherein fascism is defined more by its "energies" and "ideologies" than by its local manifestations. In two of the volume's early essays, Maggie Clinton and Paul D. Barclay examine the use of public imagery-modernist visuals in interwar China, and chureito, or loyal-spirit towers, in Japan-to envision and shore up support for nationalist ideologies. In her essay, Ruth Ben-Ghiat challenges the fascist objective to erase the agency of the individual in favor of the undifferentiated mass by examining images of faces taken from everyday life under fascist regimes. In another essay, Lorena Rizzo investigates fascist and imperialist entanglement in Southern Africa by examining photographs of settler colonialism in Namibia. The later essays historicize the interconnected visual and historical lineages within the Netherlands, Japan, Indonesia, Slovakia, and Spain-contexts that combine to create a common vocabulary for national identity making. In these essays, Ethan Mark, Bertrand Metton, and Nadya Bair investigate the actors and methods integral to creating a joint foundation for fascist aesthetics. In the second to last essay, Claire Zimmerman addresses the ways in which national and regional narrative building contributes to establishing various futures, accounting for the importance of understanding the implications behind elements of style and image when examining the visual rhetoric of fascism. This collection will be particularly suited to students"--
Beteiligte Person(en) | , |
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Ort, Verlag, Jahr |
Durham
: Duke University Press
, 2020
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Umfang | 1 online resource (1 online resource) |
ISBN | 1-4780-0438-X |
Sprache | Englisch |
Zusatzinfo | Introduction : a portable concept of fascism / Julia Adeney Thomas -- Subjects of a new visual order : fascist Media in 1930s China / Maggie Clinton -- Fascism carved in stone : monuments to loyal spirits in wartime Manchukuo / Paul D. Barclay -- Nazism, everydayness, and spectacle : the mass form in metropolitan modernity / Geoff Eley -- Five faces of fascism / Ruth Ben-Ghiat -- Facetime with Hitler / Lutz Koepnick -- Seeing through whiteness : late 1930s settler photography in Namibia under South African rule / Lorena Rizzo -- Revolution by redefinition : Japan's war without pictures / Julia Adeney Thomas -- Fascisms seen and unseen : the Netherlands, Japan, Indonesia, and the relationalities of imperial crisis / Ethan Mark -- Youth movements, nazism, and war : photography and the making of a Slovak future in World War II (1939-1944) // Bertrand Metton -- From antifascism to humanism : the legacies of Robert Capa's Spanish Civil War photography / Nadya Bair -- Heedless oblivion : curating architecture after World War II / Claire Zimmerman -- Conclusion. |
Zusatzinfo | English |
Online-Zugang | ProQuest Ebook Central PDA (EPDA) KU Select 2019 HSS Books Frontlist https://doi.org/10.1215/9781478004387 |
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