James M. Harding, John Rouse (eds.): Not the Other Avant-Garde: The Transnational Foundations of Avant-Garde Performance (2006)
Filed under book | Tags: · africa, argentina, art history, avant-garde, fluxus, india, japan, mexico, middle east, music history, performance, performance art, theatre

“Almost without exception, studies of the avant-garde take for granted the premise that the influential experimental practices associated with the avant-garde began primarily as a European phenomenon that in turn spread around the world. These ten original essays, especially commissioned for Not the Other Avant-Garde, forge a radically new conception of the avant-garde by demonstrating the many ways in which the first—and second—wave avant-gardes were always already a transnational phenomenon, an amalgam of often contradictory performance traditions and practices developed in various cultural locations around the world, including Africa, the Middle East, Mexico, Argentina, India, and Japan. Essays from leading scholars and critics—including Marvin Carlson, Sudipto Chatterjee, John Conteh-Morgan, Peter Eckersall, Harry J. Elam Jr., Joachim Fiebach, David G. Goodman, Jean Graham-Jones, Hannah Higgins, and Adam Versényi—suggest collectively that the very concept of the avant-garde is possible only if conceptualized beyond the limitations of Eurocentric paradigms.
Not the Other Avant-Garde is groundbreaking in both avant-garde studies and performance studies and will be a valuable contribution to the fields of theater studies, modernist studies, art history, literature, and music history.”
Publisher University of Michigan Press, 2006
Theater: Theory/Text/Performance series
ISBN 0472069314, 9780472099313
312 pages
PDF (updated on 2017-7-11)
Comment (0)Michelle Henning: Museums, Media and Cultural Theory (2005)
Filed under book | Tags: · archive, archiving, art, avant-garde, cultural memory, exhibition, memory, museum

Museums can work to reproduce ideologies and confirm the existing order of things, or as instruments of social reform. Yet objects in museums can exceed their designated roles as documents or specimens. In this wideranging and original book, Michelle Henning explores how historical and contemporary museums and exhibitions restage the relationship between people and material things. In doing so, they become important sites for the development of new forms of experience, memory and knowledge.
Henning reveals how museums can be theorised as a form of media. She discusses both historical and contemporary examples, from cabinets of curiosity, through the avant-garde exhibition design of Lissitzky and Bayer; the experimental museums of Paul Otlet and Otto Neurath; to science centres; immersive and virtual museums; and major developments such as Guggenheim Bilbao, Tate Modern in London and the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington D.C.
Museums, Media and Cultural Theory is unique in its treatment of the museum as a media-form, and in its detailed and critical discussion of a wide range of display techniques. It is an indispensable introduction to some of the key ideas, texts and histories relevant to the museum in the 21st century.
Publisher Open University Press, an imprint of McGraw-Hill International, 2005
Issues in Cultural and Media Studies series
ISBN 0335225756, 9780335225750
183 pages
via Jo Morfin
Jindřich Chalupecký: Úděl umělce. Duchampovské meditace (1998) [Czech]
Filed under book | Tags: · art, art criticism, art history, avant-garde, dada

V Marcelu Duchampovi nachází Jindřich Chalupecký nejdůležitěší a nejvlivnější osobnost světového moderního umění. Práce, z níž je cítit autorova hluboká zaujatost tématem, poprvé u nás podává souhrnný pohled na Marcela Duchampa, bez něhož je veškeré umění 20. století nemyslitelné. Kniha, která je výsledkem mnohaletého autorova studia, vychází doplněna řadou barevných a černobílých vyobrazení.
Epilogue: Pavla Pečinková
Publisher Torst, Prague, 1998
ISBN 8072150502
456 pages
PDF (no OCR)
Comment (0)