Between Image and Identity: Transnational Fantasy, Symbolic Violence, and Feminist Misrecognition

Between Image and Identity: Transnational Fantasy, Symbolic Violence, and Feminist Misrecognition

by Karina A. Eileraas
Between Image and Identity: Transnational Fantasy, Symbolic Violence, and Feminist Misrecognition

Between Image and Identity: Transnational Fantasy, Symbolic Violence, and Feminist Misrecognition

by Karina A. Eileraas

eBook

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Overview

What does it mean to insist on the visual as a form of psychic and political violence? And how are women specifically targeted by symbolic violence during periods of war and colonization? Between Image and Identity highlights postcolonial feminist efforts to transform violence into aesthetic and political strategies of resistance. This book explores the 'autobiographical' literature, visual, and performance art of postcolonial women from Maghreb and Southeast Asia including Leila Sebbar, Assia Djebar, and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha. Karina Eileraas critically examines how contemporary these artists actively participate in the violence of representation in order to re-imagine the relationship between image and identity. By exploring the creative potentials of fantasy, alienation, and misrecognition in their work, these artists rewrite postcolonial history and re-vision the relationships between sexual politics, symbolic violence, and national memory. Between Image and Identity is a compelling and innovative book that will appeal to those interested in postcolonial and feminist studies, autobiography, visual culture, war and trauma studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739152294
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 07/19/2007
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 511 KB

About the Author

Karina Eileraas is visiting assistant professor of women's studies at UCLA.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 Fantasizing the Self: Violence and the (Im)possibilities of Representation
Chapter 2 Disorienting Looks, Ecarts d'Identité Colonial Photography, Ownership, and Identity
Chapter 3 Misrecognizing the Family Album: Blood, Fantasy, and Nationality in the Works of Hèléne Cixous and Theresa Hak Kyung Cha
Chapter 4 Dismembering the Gaze: Speleology and Vivisection in Assia Djebar's L'amour, la fantasia
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