Description

Argues that aesthetic pleasure plays a key role in both racial practices and struggles against racist
domination
For Pleasure proposes that experimental aesthetics shaped race in the twentieth-century United States
by creating transformative scenes of pleasure. Rachel Jane Carroll explains how aesthetic pleasure is
fundamental to the production and circulation of racial meaning in the United States through a study of
experimental work by authors and artists of color.
For Pleasure offers methods for reading experimental literature and art produced by racially minoritized
authors and artists working in and around the US, including Isaac Julien, Nella Larsen, Yoko Ono, Jack
Whitten, Byron Kim, Glenn Ligon, Zora Neale Hurston, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, and Cici Wu. Along the
way, we learn what a racist joke has to do with the history of monochrome painting, if beauty has a part
to play in social change, and whether whimsy should be taken seriously as a political affect. Carroll
draws attention to key connections between aesthetic pleasure and experimentation through their
shared capacity for world-building. Neither aesthetic pleasure nor experimental forms are liberatory in
and of themselves; however, both can interrupt, defamiliarize, and rearrange our habits of aesthetic
judgment.

For Pleasure: Race, Experimentalism, and Aesthetics

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Hardback by Rachel Jane Carroll

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Short Description:

Argues that aesthetic pleasure plays a key role in both racial practices and struggles against racist domination For Pleasure proposes... Read more

    Publisher: New York University Press
    Publication Date: 02/01/2024
    ISBN13: 9781479826728, 978-1479826728
    ISBN10: 1479826723

    Number of Pages: 304

    Non Fiction , ELT & Literary Studies , Education

    Description

    Argues that aesthetic pleasure plays a key role in both racial practices and struggles against racist
    domination
    For Pleasure proposes that experimental aesthetics shaped race in the twentieth-century United States
    by creating transformative scenes of pleasure. Rachel Jane Carroll explains how aesthetic pleasure is
    fundamental to the production and circulation of racial meaning in the United States through a study of
    experimental work by authors and artists of color.
    For Pleasure offers methods for reading experimental literature and art produced by racially minoritized
    authors and artists working in and around the US, including Isaac Julien, Nella Larsen, Yoko Ono, Jack
    Whitten, Byron Kim, Glenn Ligon, Zora Neale Hurston, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, and Cici Wu. Along the
    way, we learn what a racist joke has to do with the history of monochrome painting, if beauty has a part
    to play in social change, and whether whimsy should be taken seriously as a political affect. Carroll
    draws attention to key connections between aesthetic pleasure and experimentation through their
    shared capacity for world-building. Neither aesthetic pleasure nor experimental forms are liberatory in
    and of themselves; however, both can interrupt, defamiliarize, and rearrange our habits of aesthetic
    judgment.

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