What the Body Cost

What the Body Cost Desire, History, and Performance

Paperback (14 May 2004)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Reexamines rebelliousness and desire in the history of performance art

Because performance is by its very nature ephemeral, it elicits a desire for what is lost more than any other form of art making. But what is the nature of that desire, and on what models has it been structured? How has it affected the ways in which the history of performance art gets told?

In What the Body Cost, Jane Blocker revisits key works in performance art by Carolee Schneemann, Vito Acconci, Hannah Wilke, Yves Klein, Ana Mendieta, and others to challenge earlier critiques that characterize performance, or body art, as a purely revolutionary art form and fail to recognize its reactionary-and sometimes damaging-effects. The scholarship to date on performance art has not, she finds, gone far enough in locating the body at the center of the performance, nor has it acknowledged the psychic, emotional, or social costs exacted on that body.

Drawing on the work of critical theorists such as Roland Barthes and Catherine Belsey, as well as queer theory and feminism, What the Body Cost reads against patriarchal and heteronormative tendencies in art history while providing a corrective to the established view that performance art is necessarily transgressive. Instead, Blocker suggests that the historiography of performance art is a postmodern lovers's discourse in which practitioners, historians, and critics alike fervently seek the body while doubting it can ever be found.

Book information

ISBN: 9780816643196
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Imprint: University of Minnesota Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 702.81
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 162
Weight: 330g
Height: 254mm
Width: 177mm
Spine width: 9mm