The Pirate's Fiancée: Feminism, Reading, Postmodernism (Questions for Feminism)
The Pirate's Fiancée: Feminism, Reading, Postmodernism (Questions for Feminism)

The Pirate's Fiancée: Feminism, Reading, Postmodernism (Questions for Feminism)

  • Authour
    Morris, Meaghan

  • Pages
    287

  • Condition
    good

  • Edition
    First Edition

  • Publisher
    Verso

  • Year
    1988

Availability: In Stock
Regular price
Rs. 1,395.00
Regular price
Rs. 1,395.00
Sale price
Rs. 1,395.00
Hurry, only 1 item(s) left in stock!

Product Description

 

 

Binding: paperback

Number Of Pages: 298

Release Date: 17-11-1988

Details: 'Appropriation', 'bricolage', 'recording', 'scavenging'-a scenario of image piracy has provided the buzzwords of pop cultural theory for most of the 1980s. While programmes for political action in culture have increasingly taken the form of a romance of buccaneering, the more sedate theoretical disputes about postmodernism have begun to generate a myth that feminists, or even women, have so far said little or nothing about one of the most action-packed debates of the decade.

Taking her title from a 1969 film by Nelly Kaplan, Meaghan Morris considers the implications for feminism of a politics which transforms the materials of culture. She also considers the implications for post-modernism and pop theory of recognising the extent to which they already represent a borrowing of feminist thought.

In a collection of essays on subjects ranging from blockbuster cinema to art photography, from Foucault to Mary Daly, from Susan Sontag and Jean Baudrillard to Paul Hogan, she argues that a feminist practice of rewriting discourses should emerge from a political critique of the positioning of women, rather than a vague thematics of changing things.

 

You may also like this

Recently Viewed Products