Description
Robyn Ferrell's latest book is a powerful and evocative engagement with the complex of raced and gendered relationships produced by and exchanged through global economic art markets. She draws on her experience with Warlipi women artists from the Australian Tanami desert to challenge easy distinctions between art and artifact, nature and culture, and, in complicated ways, aboriginal art and Western art. Ferrell brings this aboriginal art to bear on Western aesthetics in ways that not only challenge that aesthetics and the meaning of color, shape, form, and art itself, but also trouble what is considered authentic aboriginal art. She discusses how much of contemporary aboriginal art is produced for Western markets that have in some significant ways transformed traditional practice. She also forges a conversation between aboriginal aesthetics and Western aesthetics that pushes contemporary debates beyond their usually comfortable boundaries. -- Kelly Oliver, Vanderbilt University, author of Animal Lessons: How They Teach Us to Be Human
About the Author
Robyn Ferrell is a research fellow in the Gender and Cultural Studies Department at the University of Sydney and has taught at the University of Melbourne, Macquarie University, and the University of Tasmania. She has also held visiting research positions at the London School of Economics and the University of Western Sydney and is the author of Copula: Sexual Technologies, Reproductive Powers, Genres of Philosophy and Passion in Theory: Conceptions of Freud and Lacan.
Reviews
Sacred Exchanges is beautifully written. One of its main strengths lies in its nuanced, interdisciplinary, and comparative approach. It skillfully negotiates among different cultural perspectives and theoretical approaches to art and politics, ranging from indigenous studies, feminism, and postcolonial studies to psychoanalysis and philosophy. Equally at home in all of these modes of interpretation, Robyn Ferrell at the same time exposes their limitations in the context of intercultural encounter with Western and non-Western art forms. This book strikes a felicitous balance between innovative theoretical analysis, the engaging interpretation of particular artists, and timely discussions of specific legal cases regarding the recognition of aboriginal rights. -- Ewa Ziarek, State University of New York, Buffalo, and author of An Ethics of Dissensus: Feminism, Postmodernity, and the Politics of Radical Democracy Through the lens of the Australian Aboriginal art movement Ferrell confronts the reader with some surprising truths about the world we live in and the myopic and murderous callousness which makes us inattentive to these realities. -- Joshua Paetku Evening Haze
Book Information
ISBN 9780231148801
Author Robyn Ferrell
Format Hardback
Page Count 192
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press