|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Gary Alan FinePublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press ISBN: 9780226560212ISBN 10: 022656021 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 31 August 2018 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews""Alternately engrossing, distressing, and hilarious--a must-read for anyone interested in learning more about the inner machinations of cultural production in the United States.""-- ""The New Criterion"" ""Sure to be recognized as an essential text in the sociology of art and the sociology of higher education. But its implications for thinking about contemporary work and culture reach far beyond its specific focus. . . . Fine's book offers more than a reflective description and analysis of a new site of art patronage and occupational socialization. . . This book should stimulate thinking on aspects of contemporary culture whose import reaches far beyond art and higher education.""-- ""American Journal of Sociology"" ""Thoughtful and comprehensive. . . Often deliciously wry. . . Fine is an excellent observer of the peculiar dance of the academic artist, with a distance that he insists on with the lightest of touches throughout the book.""-- ""The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory"" ""Rich and insightful...Talking Art is a well-crafted and well-conceived work that extends and enriches both interactionist traditions in sociology and performance-oriented ones in folkloristics. My copy is heavily marked noting key insights and finely wrought sentences. I wish I could share them all with you but instead I urge you take up the text yourself.""-- ""Journal of Folklore Research"" ""Fine once again works his ethnographic magic by taking something that may otherwise be overlooked as everyday or simple--in this case, the critique. . . . Talking Art offers interesting insight into the tensions that derive from the ongoing development and maturation of the art world. It serves as a reminder that disciplines are also group cultures, with both localized and shared traits, and which are always shifting shapes in accordance with broader societal changes.""-- ""Symbolic Interaction"" ""Fine, a seasoned veteran of ethnography, has written a number of seminal and inspiring works over his distinguished career. Talking Art strikes me as the crown jewel of the corpus: a complex, multisited ethnography, rich with in-depth interviews and detailed field observations. Fine has produced a work of scholarly importance, which overturns romantic notions of the sui generis genius working in isolation. This book demonstrates the power of a veteran eye for interactionist approaches to everyday life, coupled with prose that is simultaneously probing and filled with a sense of curiosity.""-- ""Black Hawk Hancock, author of American Allegory"" ""The MFA in visual art is one of the least defined degrees in the university and the art critique the least conceptualized form of assessment. Yet the MFA is encircled by an enormous literature--in art history, art education, assessment, administration, and criticism. Talking Art adds a very welcome new voice. This ethnographic study of four MFA students uses Fine's extensive field notes and photographs to explore the nature, content, and purpose of the contemporary MFA in North America.""-- ""James Elkins, author of Art Critiques: A Guide"" ""This brilliant book takes us behind the scenes to explore how today's artists are trained. The art world, as Fine shows, is now an occupational and academic community, and his ethnography illuminates that in fascinating detail. Talking Art should be indispensable reading for anyone who enjoys viewing art or intends to become an artist.""-- ""David Halle, author of New York's New Edge"" ""Valuable for its description of how the art world and the university have grown entangled. . . . Talking Art offers us an ethnography of visual-arts education: a dispatch from MFA island. Art school, Fine finds, is a subculture, with an austere patois and peculiar rites of praise and humiliation.""-- ""Chronicle of Higher Education"" This brilliant book takes us behind the scenes to explore how today's artists are trained. The art world, as Fine shows, is now an occupational and academic community, and his ethnography illuminates that in fascinating detail. Talking Art should be indispensable reading for anyone who enjoys viewing art or intends to become an artist. --David Halle, author of New York's New Edge The MFA in visual art is one of the least defined degrees in the university and the art critique the least conceptualized form of assessment. Yet the MFA is encircled by an enormous literature--in art history, art education, assessment, administration, and criticism. Talking Art adds a very welcome new voice. This ethnographic study of four MFA students uses Fine's extensive field notes and photographs to explore the nature, content, and purpose of the contemporary MFA in North America. --James Elkins, author of Art Critiques: A Guide Fine, a seasoned veteran of ethnography, has written a number of seminal and inspiring works over his distinguished career. Talking Art strikes me as the crown jewel of the corpus: a complex, multisited ethnography, rich with in-depth interviews and detailed field observations. Fine has produced a work of scholarly importance, which overturns romantic notions of the sui generis genius working in isolation. This book demonstrates the power of a veteran eye for interactionist approaches to everyday life, coupled with prose that is simultaneously probing and filled with a sense of curiosity. --Black Hawk Hancock, author of American Allegory Author InformationGary Alan Fineis the James E. Johnson Professor of Sociology at Northwestern University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |