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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ann Millett-Gallant (University of North Carolina, USA) , Elizabeth Howie (Coastal Carolina University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.508kg ISBN: 9781472453525ISBN 10: 1472453522 Pages: 218 Publication Date: 24 October 2016 Audience: College/higher education , College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'Disability and Art History makes a definitive claim for the importance of disability in art. Moving seamlessly from the past to the present, and indicating an influential through line between the two, the collection of essays shows not only how important disability is to art works, but how disability becomes a fascinating focus for artists of all kinds. The book particularly illustrates how transgressive disability art can be and how different bodies and minds redefine what we think about when we think about visual art.' - Lennard. J. Davis, University of Illinois, USA 'This original book offers fresh insights as it examines art history's blindness to the burgeoning scholarship in disability studies. Rather than mock the discipline's impairments or seek a cure, the diverse essays think deeply about their social and cultural significance across an intriguing range of historical periods and places.' - Jane Blocker, University of Minnesota, USA 'Millett-Gallant & Howie's Disability and Art History provides scholarly examples of how representations of disability reoccur and are recycled in visual culture. ã From photography to cinema, from Meso-American pottery figures to German Expressionism, from the disabled as artist to the artistic rediscovery of older representations of the disabled, this first-rate collection provides much for the Disability Studies classroom and will add substantially to a rethinking of Art History to introduce the student to the world of visual representations of disability.' - Sander L. Gilman, Emory University, USA 'Disability and Art History makes a definitive claim for the importance of disability in art. Moving seamlessly from the past to the present, and indicating an influential through line between the two, the collection of essays shows not only how important disability is to art works, but how disability becomes a fascinating focus for artists of all kinds. The book particularly illustrates how transgressive disability art can be and how different bodies and minds redefine what we think about when we think about visual art.' - Lennard. J. Davis, University of Illinois, USA 'This original book offers fresh insights as it examines art history's blindness to the burgeoning scholarship in disability studies. Rather than mock the discipline's impairments or seek a cure, the diverse essays think deeply about their social and cultural significance across an intriguing range of historical periods and places.' - Jane Blocker, University of Minnesota, USA 'Millett-Gallant & Howie's Disability and Art History provides scholarly examples of how representations of disability reoccur and are recycled in visual culture. From photography to cinema, from Meso-American pottery figures to German Expressionism, from the disabled as artist to the artistic rediscovery of older representations of the disabled, this first-rate collection provides much for the Disability Studies classroom and will add substantially to a rethinking of Art History to introduce the student to the world of visual representations of disability.' - Sander L. Gilman, Emory University, USA 'Disability and Art History makes a definitive claim for the importance of disability in art. Moving seamlessly from the past to the present, and indicating an influential through line between the two, the collection of essays shows not only how important disability is to art works, but how disability becomes a fascinating focus for artists of all kinds. The book particularly illustrates how transgressive disability art can be and how different bodies and minds redefine what we think about when we think about visual art.' - Lennard. J. Davis, University of Illinois, USA 'This original book offers fresh insights as it examines art history's blindness to the burgeoning scholarship in disability studies. Rather than mock the discipline's impairments or seek a cure, the diverse essays think deeply about their social and cultural significance across an intriguing range of historical periods and places.' - Jane Blocker, University of Minnesota, USA 'Millett-Gallant & Howie's Disability and Art History provides scholarly examples of how representations of disability reoccur and are recycled in visual culture. From photography to cinema, from Meso-American pottery figures to German Expressionism, from the disabled as artist to the artistic rediscovery of older representations of the disabled, this first-rate collection provides much for the Disability Studies classroom and will add substantially to a rethinking of Art History to introduce the student to the world of visual representations of disability.' - Sander L. Gilman, Emory University, USA a very important book. (...) will be of particular interest to disability studies scholars and students, art historians, museum curators, and museum educators. Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies 14:3, 2020 'Disability and Art History makes a definitive claim for the importance of disability in art. Moving seamlessly from the past to the present, and indicating an influential through line between the two, the collection of essays shows not only how important disability is to art works, but how disability becomes a fascinating focus for artists of all kinds. The book particularly illustrates how transgressive disability art can be and how different bodies and minds redefine what we think about when we think about visual art.' - Lennard. J. Davis, University of Illinois, USA 'This original book offers fresh insights as it examines art history's blindness to the burgeoning scholarship in disability studies. Rather than mock the discipline's impairments or seek a cure, the diverse essays think deeply about their social and cultural significance across an intriguing range of historical periods and places.' - Jane Blocker, University of Minnesota, USA 'Millett-Gallant & Howie's Disability and Art History provides scholarly examples of how representations of disability reoccur and are recycled in visual culture. From photography to cinema, from Meso-American pottery figures to German Expressionism, from the disabled as artist to the artistic rediscovery of older representations of the disabled, this first-rate collection provides much for the Disability Studies classroom and will add substantially to a rethinking of Art History to introduce the student to the world of visual representations of disability.' - Sander L. Gilman, Emory University, USA Author InformationAnn Millett-Gallant is a Senior Lecturer for the Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies Program at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She holds a PhD in art history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and her research focuses on representations of disability in art and visual culture. She is the author of two books, The Disabled Body in Contemporary Art and Re-Membering: Putting Mind and Body Back Together Following Traumatic Brain Injury, as well as a number of essays for academic journals. Prior to this volume, she has chaired several panels at academic conferences about and co-edited a special issue of the Review of Disability Studies on interdisciplinary art history and disability studies research. She also enjoys painting and drawing. Visit her website at annmg.com. Elizabeth Howie is Associate Professor of Art History at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, South Carolina. She received her PhD in art history at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Publications include ""Proof of the Forgotten: A Benjaminian Reading of Daguerre’s Two Views of the Boulevard du Temple,"" in Walter Benjamin and the Aesthetics of Change: An Interdisciplinary Approach; ""Bringing Out the Past: Courtly Cruising and Nineteenth-Century American Men’s Passionate Friendship Portraits,"" in Love Objects: Emotion, Design, and Material Culture; and a co-edited (with Ann Millett-Gallant) special issue of the Review of Disability Studies on interdisciplinary art history and disability studies research. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |