
Replications
Archaeology, Art History, Psychoanalysis
Whitney Davis(Author)
Pennsylvania State University Press
Published on 15. November 1996
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-0-271-01524-8 (ISBN)
Description
The twelve interdisciplinary essays collected here explore what Whitney Davis calls "replication" in archaeology, art history, and psychoanalysis-the sequential production of similar artifacts or images substitutable for one another in specific contexts of use. Davis suggests that while archaeology deals with the "physics" of replication (its material conditions and constraints), psychoanalysis deals with the "psychics" of replication (its mental conditions and constraints).
Because art history is equally interested in the material properties and in the personal and cultural meaning of artifacts and images, it can mediate the interests of archaeology and psychoanalysis. Thus Replications explores not only the differences between but also the common ground shared by archaeology, art history, and psychoanalysis-focusing, for example, on their mutual interest in the "style" of artifacts or image making, their need to treat the "nonintentional" or "nonmeaningful" element in production, and their models of the subjective and social transmission of replications in the life history of persons and communities.
Replications is an original contribution to an emerging field of study in domains as diverse as philosophy, cognitive science, connoisseurship, and cultural studies-the intersection of the material and the meaningful in the human production of artifacts. Davis develops formal models for and theories about this relationship, exploring the ideas of a number of philosophers, historians, and critics and presenting his own distinctive conceptual analysis.
Because art history is equally interested in the material properties and in the personal and cultural meaning of artifacts and images, it can mediate the interests of archaeology and psychoanalysis. Thus Replications explores not only the differences between but also the common ground shared by archaeology, art history, and psychoanalysis-focusing, for example, on their mutual interest in the "style" of artifacts or image making, their need to treat the "nonintentional" or "nonmeaningful" element in production, and their models of the subjective and social transmission of replications in the life history of persons and communities.
Replications is an original contribution to an emerging field of study in domains as diverse as philosophy, cognitive science, connoisseurship, and cultural studies-the intersection of the material and the meaningful in the human production of artifacts. Davis develops formal models for and theories about this relationship, exploring the ideas of a number of philosophers, historians, and critics and presenting his own distinctive conceptual analysis.
Reviews / Votes
"Arguing like an analytic philosopher with the skill of a well-trained art historian, Whitney Davis combines the rigorous erudition of a classical scholar with an absolutely contemporary sensibility. Ferociously intelligent, he focuses on fundamental conceptual issues. Art historians, philosophers of art, and cultural historians will want to read this book with as much close attention as it devotes to the texts and images Davis discusses."-David Carrier, Carnegie Mellon UniversityMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Pennsylvania
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
71 Halftones, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 279 mm
Width: 216 mm
Thickness: 22 mm
Weight
1220 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-271-01524-8 (9780271015248)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Whitney Davis is John Evans Professor of Art History and Director of the Alice Berline Kaplan Center for the Humanities at Northwestern University. He is the author of, most recently, Pacing the World: Construction in the Sculpture of David Rabinowitch (1996), Drawing the Dream: Homosexuality, Interpretation, and Freud's "Wolf Man" (1995), and Masking the Blow: The Scene of Representation in Late Prehistoric Egyptian Art (1992).