Queer and Bookish: Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick as Book Artist
Jason Edwards
Published on March 3, 2022 by punctum books
- Pages
- 438 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 5⤫8 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-024-8 (Paperback)
- ISBN (PDF)
- ISBN: 978-1-68571-025-5 (PDF)
- LCCN
- LCCN: 2022932939
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: DES001000, SOC064000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: DSBJ, JBSJ, WFT
Queer and Bookish: Eve Kosofksy Sedgwick as Book Artist represents the first booklength study to explore the intersections of Sedgwick’s critical writing, poetry, and most importantly, book art, making the case that her art criticism, especially her meditations on domestic and nineteenth-century photography, and “artist’s book” projects are as formally complex and brilliant, conceptually significant and life-changing, as her literary criticism and theory. In addition, Edwards’s book represents a significant intervention into recent debates about reparative reading, surface reading, and the descriptive turn across the humanities, because of its sustained, positive accounts of Sedgwick’s books as visual, textural, and material objects.
The book ranges widely across Sedgwick’s published output, from The Coherence of Gothic Conventions (1980) to the posthumously published The Weather in Proust (2011), and features her meditations on a wide variety of art-historical topoi, including Judith Scott’s queer/crip fiber art; the anality of Polykleitos’s Doryphorus; queer Modernist typography; Piranesi’s punitive space; Duncan Grant and Vanessa Bell’s queer holy family; Manet’s frontality and thalassic aesthetics; fat and thin aesthetics of various stripes; the queer photography of Anna Atkins, Clementina Hawarden, and Julia Margaret Cameron; Baron De Mayer, Eugene Atget, and P.H. Emerson; as well as David Hockney, Ken Brown, and her own father, a NASA lunar photographer. The book climaxes with two chapter-length explorations of Sedgwick’s own late-life book-art practice: her panda Valentine alphabet cards (c. 1996) and her Last Days of Pompeii/Cavafy artist book (c. 2007).
Biographies
Jason Edwards is a Professor of Art History at the University of York, where he works at the intersections of queer and vegan theory, and on British art history in its global contexts in the period from c.1760-1940. He is the author of the Routledge Critical Thinkers volume on Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick (2009) as well as the editor of Bathroom Songs: Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick As a Poet (opens in new tab)(punctum books, 2017), which includes Sedgwick’s uncollected poems. In addition, Jason is also the author of Alfred Gilbert’s Aestheticism (Ashgate, 2006), and the co-editor of special issues of journals and edited collections on Grinling Gibbons, Joseph Cornell, the British School of Sculpture c.1760-1832, Victorian sculpture in its global contexts, Arts and Crafts and Aesthetic interiors, and homoeroticism, art, and aestheticism in Victorian Britain. Jason has also co-curated exhibitions on J.M.W. Turner’s whaling imagery, Alfred Gilbert, and Victorian sculpture more broadly, at Tate Britain, the Yale Center for British Art, Hull Maritime Museum, Lotherton Hall, and the Henry Moore Institute for the Study of Sculpture, in Leeds. Jason’s forthcoming book Queer Craft deals with Sedgwick’s work as a fiber artist.
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Genres
- Art+Aesthetics
- Literary Studies
- TransQueer
Keywords
- AIDS
- book art
- Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
- literary studies
- pandas
- photography
- queer studies
