- ContentsVol 83 : Nos 1–4
Vol 83 : No 1
THE FEAR OF ART
v | Endangered Scholars Worldwide |
xxi | arien mack Editor’s Introduction |
PART I. THE ATTACK ON CHARLIE HEBDO: “FEAR OF ART” ENACTED | |
3 | victor s. navasky Introduction: On Enacting the Fear of Art |
7 | nik kowsar The Impact of a Post-Charlie Hebdo World on Cartoonists |
21 | saadia toor Art as/and Politics: Why the Attack on Charlie Hebdo Was Not about a “Fear of Art” |
PART II. CENSORSHIP AND BANNING | |
35 | agnes gund Introduction: Reflections on Art Censorship and Banning |
39 | olaf peters Fear and Propaganda: National Socialism and the Concept of “Degenerate Art” |
67 | david freedberg The Fear of Art: How Censorship Becomes Iconoclasm |
PART III. ACTIVIST ART | |
103 | suzanne nossel Introduction: On “Artivism,” or Art’s Utility in Activism |
107 | ricardo dominguez Fearless Art in the Age of Fear: Electronic Disturbance Theater’s Parrhesian Gestures |
115 | stephen duncombe Does it Work? The Æffect of Activist Art |
PART IV. THE POTENCY OF ART | |
137 | carin kuoni Introduction: An Aesthetics of Dissonance |
141 | holland cotter On Art, Power, and Humility |
149 | paul chan The Potency of Art |
PART V. ARTISTS IN PRISON, ARTISTS IN EXILE | |
155 | ai weiwei and ethan cohen A Conversation |
165 | jerome cohen Introduction: A Conversation about Ai Weiwei |
169 | ethan cohen On Interviewing Ai Weiwei |
175 | melissa chiu On Ai Weiwei |
179 | minky worden Ai Weiwei, Art, and Rights in China |
PART VI. ARTISTS IN EXILE | |
185 | elzbieta matynia Introduction: People to People |
191 | chaw ei thein Performing Art, Performing Fear |
199 | shirin neshat Turning Artists into Heroes? |
PART VII. WHO DOES THE POLICING? WHAT IS THE ROLE OF SELF-CENSORSHIP? | |
207 | svetlana mintcheva Introduction: Self-Policing and Self-Censorship |
211 | boris groys Hurting the Feelings of Others |
217 | lisa phillips Examine Your Own Limits |
223 | notes on contributors |
[End Page 1065]
Vol 83 : No 2
BORDERS AND THE POLITICS OF MOURNING
v | Endangered Scholars Worldwide |
xxi | alexandra délano alonso and benjamin nienass Introduction: Borders and the Politics of Mourning |
PART I: MOURNING THE OTHER | |
229 | burkhard liebsch Grief as a Source, Expression, and Register of Political Sensitivity |
255 | miriam ticktin Thinking beyond Humanitarian Borders |
PART II: REFRAMING RESPONSIBILITY | |
275 | maurizio albahari After the Shipwreck: Mourning and Citizenship in the Mediterranean, Our Sea |
295 | marina kaneti and mariana prandini assis (Re)Branding the State: Humanitarian Border Control and the Moral Imperative of State Sovereignty |
PART III: MEMORY AND THE POLITICS OF NAMING | |
329 | andreas oberprantacher Of Other Spaces (Of Memory) |
359 | jenny edkins Missing Migrants and the Politics of Naming: Names Wthout Bodies, Bodies without Names |
391 | corrie boudreaux Public Memorialization and the Grievability of Victims in Ciudad Juárez |
PART IV: BURIALS, CEMETERIES, AND PUBLIC GRIEF | |
421 | alexandra délano alonso and benjamin nienass Deaths, Visibility, and Responsibility: The Politics of Mourning at the US-Mexico Border |
453 | alice von bieberstein and erdem evren From Aggressive Humanism to Improper Mourning: Burying the Victims of Europe’s Border Regime in Berlin |
PART V: FORENSICS, CARE, AND THE RIGHTS OF THE DEAD | |
483 | ernesto schwartz-marin and arly cruz-santiago Pure Corpses, Dangerous Citizens: Transgressing the Boundaries between Experts and Mourners in the Search for the Disappeared in Mexico |
511 | alexandra délano alonso, pablo dominguez galbraith, and benjamin nienass Bringing the Dead Back into Society: An Interview with Mercedes Doretti |
535 | notes on contributors |
[End Page 1066]
Vol 83 : No 3
FAILURE
v | Endangered Scholars Worldwide |
xxi | arjun appadurai Introduction |
537 | alexandra zsigmond and contributing artists The Imagery of Failure |
549 | akeel bilgrami Failures of Mind and Meaning |
573 | noam yuran A Moralistic Failure: Mandeville and the Obscene Origin of Economic Thought |
597 | cameron tonkinwise Failing to Sense the Future: From Design to the Proactionary Test Drive |
625 | keller easterling Histories of Things That Don’t Happen and Shouldn’t Always Work |
645 | ritu birla Failure via Schumpeter: Market Globality, Empire, and the End(s) of Capitalism |
673 | saskia sassen Economic Cleansing: Failure Dressed in Fine Clothes |
689 | nikolai ssorin-chaikov Soviet Debris: Failure and the Poetics of Unfinished Construction in Northern Siberia |
723 | shiv visvanathan The Pluriverse of Failure in Indian Science |
749 | albena azmanova Empowerment as Surrender: How Women... |