Politics as Public Art: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing and Social Movements

Author:   Martin Zebracki ,  Z. Zane McNeill
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032138558


Pages:   142
Publication Date:   30 December 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Politics as Public Art: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing and Social Movements


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Author:   Martin Zebracki ,  Z. Zane McNeill
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.290kg
ISBN:  

9781032138558


ISBN 10:   1032138556
Pages:   142
Publication Date:   30 December 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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.

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Reviews

In a time of continual anxiety over climate change, political unrest, and an ongoing global health crisis, this well-considered collection reminds us of the power of political action through public art and the importance of socially engaged practice to challenge societal differences and discords. Through historical perspectives, case studies, and engaging critical analysis, this anthology serves as both a site of reflection and an inspiration of future activist art actions. Professor Cameron Cartiere, Emily Carr University, Canada Martin Zebracki and Zane McNeill's Politics as Public Art makes a valuable contribution to the emerging literature on socially engaged art. It is notable for establishing a productive linkage between the concept of a 'choreopolitics', developed by Andre Lepecki, and the aesthetics of engaged art practice and social movements more broadly. Equally importantly, the contributors outline a series of key dialogical interfaces, between the disciplines of art history, performance studies, and social movement studies, which will do much to enrich ongoing debates in the field. Crucially, the essays foreground the essential role played by the performative and the somatic in engaged art practices which seek to understand the body as both a 'signifying agent' and a matrix of social and political resistance. Professor Grant Kester, University of California, San Diego, US This is a terrific set of analyses probing the aesthetics and politics of contemporary protests. Drawing on voices from diverse locations and perspectives, including artists, curators, and scholars, this anthology lends new weight to the argument that confronting injustice requires people to choreograph multiple creative practices of synergetic collaboration. Distinguished Professor Susan Leigh Foster, University of California, Los Angeles, US


In a time of continual anxiety over climate change, political unrest, and an ongoing global health crisis, this well-considered collection reminds us of the power of political action through public art and the importance of socially engaged practice to challenge societal differences and discords. Through historical perspectives, case studies, and engaging critical analysis, this anthology serves as both a site of reflection and an inspiration of future activist art actions. Professor Cameron Cartiere, Emily Carr University, Canada Martin Zebracki and Zane McNeill's Politics as Public Art makes a valuable contribution to the emerging literature on socially engaged art. It is notable for establishing a productive linkage between the concept of a 'choreopolitics', developed by Andre Lepecki, and the aesthetics of engaged art practice and social movements more broadly. Equally importantly, the contributors outline a series of key dialogical interfaces, between the disciplines of art history, performance studies, and social movement studies, which will do much to enrich ongoing debates in the field. Crucially, the essays foreground the essential role played by the performative and the somatic in engaged art practices which seek to understand the body as both a 'signifying agent' and a matrix of social and political resistance.Professor Grant Kester, University of California, San Diego, US This is a terrific set of analyses probing the aesthetics and politics of contemporary protests. Drawing on voices from diverse locations and perspectives, including artists, curators, and scholars, this anthology lends new weight to the argument that confronting injustice requires people to choreograph multiple creative practices of synergetic collaboration. Distinguished Professor Susan Leigh Foster, University of California, Los Angeles, US


Author Information

Martin Zebracki is Associate Professor of Critical Human Geography, University of Leeds, UK, and has published widely across public art, sexuality, digital culture, and social inclusivity. Zebracki is editor of the Routledge anthologies Public Art Encounters (with Joni M. Palmer; 2017) and The Everyday Practice of Public Art (with Cameron Cartiere; 2016) and editorial board member of Public Art Dialogue. Z. Zane McNeill is an independent scholar-activist who has written on queer and trans feminisms in contemporary performance, queer of color critique, and quare studies and politichoreography. They are currently an advisory board member for the University Press of Kentucky Book Series Appalachian Futures: Black, Native & Queer Voices.

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