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In/Different Spaces: Place and Memory in Visual Culture
Contributor(s): Burgin, Victor (Author)
ISBN: 0520202996     ISBN-13: 9780520202993
Publisher: University of California Press
OUR PRICE:   $33.61  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: October 1996
Qty:
Annotation: "Victor Burgin has an extraordinary talent for writing about 'everyday life, ' melding together a category crucial to Freud, but also to Breton, the surrealists, Lefebvre, and the situationists. In/Different Spaces presents the postmodern world . . . with a dimension of lived experience which is surprisingly rare."--Peter Wollen, author of"Raiding the Icebox: Reflections on Twentieth-Century Culture

"Burgin explores those modalities of psychoanalytic identification--abjection, paranoia, psychosis--that have a particular relevance for social and cultural processes that lead to violence, exclusion, discrimination, racism, and the claims (proven and unproven) towards a new globalism. What is distinctive and laudable is a convincing attempt to 'translate' psychoanalysis to address some of the most pressing and urgent social problems that we face."--Homi K. Bhabha, author of "The Location of Culture

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Aesthetics
- Social Science | Sociology - General
- Architecture
Dewey: 111.85
LCCN: 95048900
Physical Information: 0.76" H x 6.08" W x 9.08" (1.05 lbs) 329 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Recent discussions about the culture of images have focused on issues of identity-sexual, racial, national-and the boundaries that define subjectivity. In this context Victor Burgin adopts an original critical strategy. He understands images less in traditional terms of the specific institutions that produce them, such as cinema, photography, advertising, and television, and more as hybrid mental constructs composed of fragments derived from the heterogeneous sources that together constitute the "media." Through deft analyses of a photograph by Helmut Newton, Parisian cityscapes, the space of the department store, a film by Ousmane Sembéne, and the writings of Henri Lefebvre, Andrè Breton, and Roland Barthes, Burgin develops an incisive theory of our culture of images and spectacle.

In/Different Spaces explores the construction of identities in the psychical space between perception and consciousness, drawing upon psychoanalytic theories to describe the constitution and maintenance of "self" and "us"-in imaginary spatial and temporal relations to "other" and "them"-through the all-important relay of images. For Burgin, the image is never a transparent representation of the world but rather a principal player on the stage of history.