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The Work of Art

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Art making as a way of mediating between inner and outer realities.
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  • 25 October 2016
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How are we to think of works of art? Rather than treat art as an expression of individual genius, market forces, or aesthetic principles, Michael Jackson focuses on how art effects transformations in our lives. Art opens up transitional, ritual, or utopian spaces that enable us to reconcile inward imperatives and outward constraints, thereby making our lives more manageable and meaningful. Art allows us to strike a balance between being actors and being acted upon.

Drawing on his ethnographic fieldwork in Aboriginal Australia and West Africa, as well as insights from psychoanalysis, religious studies, literature, and the philosophy of art, Jackson deploys an extraordinary range of references—from Bruegel to Beuys, Paleolithic art to performance art, Michelangelo to Munch—to explore the symbolic labor whereby human beings make themselves, both individually and socially, out of the environmental, biographical, and physical materials that affect them: a process that connects art with gestation, storytelling, and dreaming and illuminates the elementary forms of religious life.

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Price: $42.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Insurrections: Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
Publication Date: 25 October 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231178181
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, RELIGION / Spirituality, PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Existentialism, ART / Criticism & Theory

To read a book by Michael Jackson is to be in his company: to hear a cultured and cosmopolitan voice relating stories that disclose how the human and universal inhabit the personal and particular. Art and religion, he avers, are transitional phenomena that facilitate links between inner experience and outer worlds such that human life is made more viable. To craft artworks and to engender religious cosmologies and practices is to create that artifice whereby pain may translate into comprehension and anonymity into a sense of control. Jackson is a uniquely insightful and compassionate guide.
— Nigel Rapport, author of I Am Dynamite: An Alternative Anthropology of Power
Michael Jackson is Distinguished Professor of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. He is the author of the prize-winning Paths Toward a Clearing (1989) and At Home in the World (2000). His most recent Columbia University Press books include As Wide as the World Is Wise: Reinventing Philosophical Anthropology (2016) and Harmattan: A Philosophical Fiction (2015). He is also the author of The Wherewithal of Life: Ethics, Migration, and the Question of Well-being (2013); Between One and One Another (2012); and Lifeworlds: Essays in Existential Anthropology (2012).

Preamble
Part 1
Worlds Within and Worlds Without
Melbourne Now
The Elementary Forms of Religious Life
Art as Religion
The Interplay of Coming Out and Going In
Consciousness
From Joyce to Beuys
Production and Reproduction
Axes of Bias
A Visit to the Kunstmuseum Basel
Part 2
The Life and Times of Paddy Jupurrula Nelson
Ecstatic Professions
Art and Adversity: Ian Fairweather and the Solitude of Art
Transplantations: The Art of Simryn Gill
My Brother's Keeper: The Art of Susan Norrie
Heroic Failure: The Art of Sidney Nolan
Une Vie Brève, Mais Intense
The Pare Revisited
A Man of Constant Sorrow: The Existential Art of Colin McCahon
Part 3
Landscape and Nature Morte: The Art of Paul Cézanne
Art and the Unspeakable
Marina Abramovic and the Shadows of Intersubjectivity
Exodus
Making It Otherwise
Art and the Everyday
The Work of Art and the Arts of Life
Notes
Acknowledgments
Permissions
Index