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Overlooking Damage

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What does it mean to look? How does looking relate to damage? These are the fundamental questions addressed in Overlooking Damage. From the Roman triumph to the iconoclasm of ISIS and the Taliban t...
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  • 12 July 2022
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What does it mean to look? How does looking relate to damage? These are the fundamental questions addressed in Overlooking Damage. From the Roman triumph to the iconoclasm of ISIS and the Taliban to the aerial views of looted landscapes and destroyed temples visible on Google, the relationship between beauty and violence is far more intimate than we sometimes acknowledge.

Jonah Siegel makes the daring argument that a thoughtful reaction to images of damage need not stop at melancholy, but can lead us to a new reckoning. Would the objects we admire be more beautiful if they were not injured or displaced, if they did not remind us of unbearable violence? Siegel takes up writers from the time of the French Revolution to today who have reacted to the depredations of revolutionary iconoclasm, imperial looting, and industrial capitalism, and proposes that in these authors we may find resources with which to navigate our contemporary situation.

Deftly bringing the methods of literary studies to bear on important debates in the study of heritage, archaeology, and visual culture, Overlooking Damage reflects on the ways in which concepts of beauty intersect with periods of epochal violence in an attempt to resist the separation of broken things from the worlds in which they have come to be embedded.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 336
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 12 July 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503632158
Format: Paperback
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"In its aesthetic reach and ethical pressure, Overlooking Damage is dazzling and dizzying by turns. By the end you don't know whether the hum you hear is the music of the spheres or the wild spinning of your own moral compass."—Elaine Scarry, Harvard University
Jonah Siegel is Distinguished Professor of English at Rutgers University. He is the author, most recently, of Material Inspirations: The Interests of the Art Object in the Nineteenth Century and After (2020).