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Forgetting Lot's wife : on destructive spectatorship
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ISBN: 9780823227334 0823227332 9780823227341 0823227340 0823247384 9786612698743 0823241025 1282698745 0823237648 0823227359 Year: 2007 Publisher: New York : Fordham University Press,

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Can looking at disaster and mass death destroy us? Forgetting Lot’s Wife provides a theory and a fragmentary history of destructive spectatorship in the twentieth century. Its subject is the notion that the sight of historical catastrophe can destroy the spectator. The fragments of this history all lead back to the story of Lot’s wife: looking back at the destruction of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, she turns into a pillar of salt. This biblical story of punishment and transformation, a nexus of sexuality, sight, and cities, becomes the template for the modern fear that looking back at disaster might petrify the spectator. Although rarely articulated directly,this idea remains powerful in our culture. This book traces some of its aesthetic, theoretical, and ethical consequences. Harries traces the figure of Lot’s wife across media. In extended engagements with examples from twentieth-century theater, film, and painting, he focuses on the theatrical theory of Antonin Artaud, a series of American films, and paintings by Anselm Kiefer. These examples all return to the story of Lot’s wife as a way to think about modern predicaments of the spectator. On the one hand, the sometimes veiled figure of Lot’s wife allows these artists to picture the desire to destroy the spectator; on the other, she stands as a sign of the potential danger to the spectator. These works, that is, enact critiques of the very desire that inspires them.The book closes with an extended meditation on September 11, criticizing the notion that we should have been destroyed by witnessing the events of that day.

Scare quotes from Shakespeare : Marx, Keynes, and the language of reenchantment
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ISBN: 0804736219 Year: 2000 Publisher: Stanford (Calif.): Stanford university press

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Forgetting Lot's Wife
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ISBN: 9780823237647 Year: 2009 Publisher: New York, NY

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Forgetting Lot's wife : on destructive spectatorship
Author:
ISBN: 9780823237647 9780823227334 0823227332 9780823227341 0823227340 0823227359 0823237648 0823241025 0823247384 1282698745 9786612698743 Year: 2007 Publisher: New York : Fordham University Press,

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Abstract

Can looking at disaster and mass death destroy us? Forgetting Lot’s Wife provides a theory and a fragmentary history of destructive spectatorship in the twentieth century. Its subject is the notion that the sight of historical catastrophe can destroy the spectator. The fragments of this history all lead back to the story of Lot’s wife: looking back at the destruction of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, she turns into a pillar of salt. This biblical story of punishment and transformation, a nexus of sexuality, sight, and cities, becomes the template for the modern fear that looking back at disaster might petrify the spectator. Although rarely articulated directly,this idea remains powerful in our culture. This book traces some of its aesthetic, theoretical, and ethical consequences. Harries traces the figure of Lot’s wife across media. In extended engagements with examples from twentieth-century theater, film, and painting, he focuses on the theatrical theory of Antonin Artaud, a series of American films, and paintings by Anselm Kiefer. These examples all return to the story of Lot’s wife as a way to think about modern predicaments of the spectator. On the one hand, the sometimes veiled figure of Lot’s wife allows these artists to picture the desire to destroy the spectator; on the other, she stands as a sign of the potential danger to the spectator. These works, that is, enact critiques of the very desire that inspires them.The book closes with an extended meditation on September 11, criticizing the notion that we should have been destroyed by witnessing the events of that day.


Digital
"If Then the World a Theatre Present..." : Revisions of the Theatrum Mundi Metaphor in Early Modern England
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
ISBN: 9783110343939 9783110383676 9783110292299 Year: 2014 Publisher: Berlin ;; Boston De Gruyter

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