Waubonsee Community College

Misère, the visual representation of misery in the 19th century, Linda Nochlin

Label
Misère, the visual representation of misery in the 19th century, Linda Nochlin
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 164-170) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Misère
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1019645749
Responsibility statement
Linda Nochlin
Sub title
the visual representation of misery in the 19th century
Summary
In 'Misère', famed art historian Linda Nochlin reveals how, in the new form of civilization produced by the Industrial Revolution, in which the phenomenal growth of wealth occurred alongside an expansion of squalor, writers and artists of the nineteenth century used their craft to come to terms with what were often new and unprecedented social, material, and psychological circumstances. Nochlin charts the phenomenon of misery as it was represented in the popular and fine arts of the nineteenth century. Examining work by some of the great intellects of the era, including Dickens, Carlyle, Engels, Hugo, Buret, Disraeli, and de Tocqueville, as well as relative unknowns who were searching for ways to depict new realities, Nochlin draws from a range of sources that include paintings, prints, newspaper illustrations, photography, and a variety of texts: from the account of a day in the life of an eight-year-old mine worker girl to the foundational texts of the field such as Friedrich Engels's The Condition of the Working Class in England
Table Of Contents
Misère: the Irish paradigm -- The gender of misery -- Géricault, Goya and the representation of misery -- Representing misery: Courbet's Beggar woman -- Fernand Pelez: master of miserable old men -- Conclusion
Classification
Mapped to

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