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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christopher ReedPublisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.680kg ISBN: 9780231175746ISBN 10: 0231175744 Pages: 440 Publication Date: 15 November 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , College/higher education , Professional & Vocational , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsA Note on Names and Terms Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Originating Japanism: Fin-de-Siecle Paris 2. Bachelor Brahmins: Turn-of-the-Century Boston 3. Sublimation and Eccentricity in the Art of Mark Tobey: Seattle at Midcentury Conclusion: On the End of Japanism Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsIn this ground-breaking work, Reed brings eloquence, intellectual rigor, and trenchant insights to a revisionist interpretation of Japanism from its early manifestations in the circles of Edmond de Goncourt and William Bigelow in nineteenth-century Paris and Boston to its post-war reinterpretations in the work of Seattle artist Mark Tobey. Bachelor Japanists brilliantly illuminates the criticality of homosocial networks and subversion of heteronormative sexuality to the diffusion of Japanism. -- Christine Guth, Author of Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan Chris Reed's Bachelor Japanists extols the often eccentric routes that non-conformists took to escape bourgeois strictures around home and family. Mapping the homoerotic pleasures attendant upon the discovery of the Far East by the West, Reed finds that sexual difference was enabled by geographic distance and cultural (mis)translation. Never before has queer theory been brought to bear this powerfully on the Western fantasy of Japan, and vice versa, than in the three case studies-1870/80s Paris, Boston around 1900, and Seattle at mid-century-of Reed's immanently readable and now indispensible book. -- Andr Dombrowski, University of Pennsylvania Christopher Reed's luminous study offers a crucial and timely reappraisal of the Orientalism thesis. Reed shows that the early twentieth-century fascination with Japan was as a social as well as an aesthetic phenomenon. The intellectuals, curators, and makers whom Reed calls 'bachelor Japanists' challenged ideas of the West and the West's relationship to and distinctness from the East. Imagining Japan created new opportunities for fantasy, visuality, social domesticity, and collaboration. Not only an occasion for a new kind of art, Japan became an occasion for a new kind of living. -- Rebecca Walkowitz, Rutgers University Bachelor Japanists is about the queer power of the foreign, the hypo-primitive, and the hyper-civilized to unmake and remake what we think of as the self, and as the state. Beautifully written and generously, incisively critical, this is a book that not only teaches you what to think; it teaches you how to think. -- Eric Hayot, Penn State Meticulously researched and eloquently written, Bachelor Japanists brings the values of queer theory to bear on both its objects of study and the writing of art history. Focusing on how diverse japonismes provided opportunities to unlearn the West, Reed's immediately important book reconstructs and illuminates the sometimes outrageous, sometimes slyly implicit structures of dissent they inspired and facilitated: alternative forms of beauty, collecting, domesticity, and belonging. -- Christopher Bush, Northwestern University In this ground-breaking work, Reed brings eloquence, intellectual rigor, and trenchant insights to a revisionist interpretation of Japanism from its early manifestations in the circles of Edmond de Goncourt and William Bigelow in nineteenth-century Paris and Boston to its post-war reinterpretations in the work of Seattle artist Mark Tobey. Bachelor Japanists brilliantly illuminates the criticality of homosocial networks and subversion of heteronormative sexuality to the diffusion of Japanism. -- Christine Guth, author of Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, and Japan Chris Reed's Bachelor Japanists extols the often eccentric routes that non-conformists took to escape bourgeois strictures around home and family. Mapping the homoerotic pleasures attendant upon the discovery of the Far East by the West, Reed finds that sexual difference was enabled by geographic distance and cultural (mis)translation. Never before has queer theory been brought to bear this powerfully on the Western fantasy of Japan, and vice versa, than in the three case studies-1870/80s Paris, Boston around 1900, and Seattle at mid-century-of Reed's immanently readable and now indispensible book. -- Andre Dombrowski, University of Pennsylvania Christopher Reed's luminous study offers a crucial and timely reappraisal of the Orientalism thesis. Reed shows that the early twentieth-century fascination with Japan was as a social as well as an aesthetic phenomenon. The intellectuals, curators, and makers whom Reed calls 'bachelor Japanists' challenged ideas of the West and the West's relationship to and distinctness from the East. Imagining Japan created new opportunities for fantasy, visuality, social domesticity, and collaboration. Not only an occasion for a new kind of art, Japan became an occasion for a new kind of living. -- Rebecca Walkowitz, Rutgers University Bachelor Japanists is about the queer power of the foreign, the hypo-primitive, and the hyper-civilized to unmake and remake what we think of as the self, and as the state. Beautifully written and generously, incisively critical, this is a book that not only teaches you what to think; it teaches you how to think. -- Eric Hayot, Penn State Meticulously researched and eloquently written, Bachelor Japanists brings the values of queer theory to bear on both its objects of study and the writing of art history. Focusing on how diverse japonismes provided opportunities to unlearn the West, Reed's immediately important book reconstructs and illuminates the sometimes outrageous, sometimes slyly implicit structures of dissent they inspired and facilitated: alternative forms of beauty, collecting, domesticity, and belonging. -- Christopher Bush, Northwestern University Author InformationChristopher Reed is professor of English and visual culture at the Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of many books, including Art and Homosexuality: A History of Ideas (2011) and Bloomsbury Rooms: Modernism, Subculture, and Domesticity (2004). 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