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About this book
Soussloff combines a historically grounded examination of art and art historical thinking in Vienna with subsequent theories of portraiture and a careful historiography of philosophical and psychoanalytic approaches to human consciousness from Hegel to Sartre and from Freud to Lacan. She chronicles the emergence of a social theory of art among the art historians of the Vienna School, demonstrates how the Expressionist painter Oskar Kokoschka depicted the Jewish subject, and explores the development of pictorialist photography. Reflecting on the implications of the visualized, modern subject for textual and linguistic analyses of subjectivity, Soussloff concludes that the Viennese art historians, photographers, and painters will henceforth have to be recognized as precursors to such better-known theorists of the subject as Sartre, Foucault, and Lacan.
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Table of contents
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Subject in Art
- 1 A Genealogy of the Subject in the Portrait
- 2 The Birth of the Social History of Art
- 3 The Subject at Risk: Jewish Assimilation and Viennese Portraiture
- 4 Art Photography, Portraiture, and Modern Subjectivity
- 5 Regarding the Subject in Art History: An Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Illustration Credits
- Index