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A Concise Companion to Visual Culture


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of postmodernity (among them Jean Francois Lyotard, Jean Baudrillard, and Frederic Jameson) highlighted the demise of grand narratives, the importance of identity and relative subject positions, and the contingency of art and culture on the economy and politics. The sense of urgency to contextualize and politicize culture, to understand our own agencies and biases as authors, and to construct histories alternative to those written within traditional disciplines led to a sense of progressive political possibility in the study of media, art, and culture.

      By the late 1980s and early 1990s, visual studies began to become institutionalized. Academic programs were established in the United States and England, and the publication of foundational textbooks and readers helped to delimit the parameters of the field and to establish the key tropes of visual culture (see, for example, Bryson, Holly, and Moxey 1994; Mirzoeff 1998; Evans and Hall 1999; Sturken and Cartwright 2001). These concerns include the dynamics of the gaze, technologies of vision, the politics of representation, conceptions of space and surveillance, and changing notions of the body, subjectivity, and identity. By the turn of this century, professional organizations such as the College Art Association and the American Studies Association had established visual culture caucuses to showcase emerging work in the field, and visual studies saw strong representation at the Society for Cinema and Media Studies and the Modern Language Association as well. In 2011 the Alliance for Networking Visual Culture was developed, transforming scholarly communications and publishing platforms for born‐digital and performance‐based material.

      The collaboration that produced this volume is itself a product of the institutionalization of visual studies as an interdiscipline. We, the editors, met in the Visual and Cultural Studies (VCS) program at the University of Rochester in the early years of the twenty‐first century. VCS was founded in 1989 as a program in Comparative Arts (the name was changed to Visual and Cultural Studies program in 1991). Drawing together faculty from the departments of Art History, English, Modern Languages and Cultures, and Anthropology, the program’s founders shared an interest in poststructuralism. Founding faculty member Michael Ann Holly presents the genesis of the program as organic—a congregation of like‐minded scholars who, as D. N. Rodowick, another former faculty member, put it, sought to “get outside one’s field and exploit other resources” (Rodowick, quoted in Dikovitskaya 2005, 93).

      Over the past thirty years, visual studies has matured and moved away from the margins. It is today an academic field established nationally and internationally, and is represented in the work of an increasingly diverse group of scholars with a broad range of social, cultural, and generational perspectives. This is in part due to a growing understanding, in a variety of disciplines (art history, literary studies, film and media studies, etc.), of the limitations of conventional cultural categories and traditional modes of disciplinary inquiry. Consequently, visual studies has intersected in vital ways with fields such as queer theory, critical race theory, disability studies, new materialism, and posthumanism. Yet the broader acceptance of visual culture as an intellectual project has also generated resistance within the academy. In 1996, the journal October published its now notorious “Visual Culture Questionnaire,” which was deeply critical of visual studies, suggesting that it was “helping, in its own modest, academic way, to produce subjects for the next stage of globalized capital” (October 1996, 25). Relatedly, the very concept of interdisciplinarity has become fraught. While it offers sites of tremendous potential for exciting and transformative scholarship, it is also an all‐too‐convenient excuse for the neoliberal restructuring of university curricula without the infusion of new resources. Visual studies as a field is no exception. Some understandably wonder whether the institutionalization of the field has dulled its critical bite. As W. J. T. Mitchell argues in this volume, “I am all for visual culture studies serving as a source of ideas and tactics for the critical exposure of the spectacle. But I don’t see it as uniquely positioned as a form of political action—not any more than other disciplines of the social sciences and humanities.”

      Also at issue are the limitations of vision as a framework for cultural inquiry. With the increasing ubiquity of images as a phenomenon of contemporary digital life, the sheer volume of visual culture in the present moment is so vast and its content so ephemeral and mutable as to almost defy comprehension. Visuality can seem at times too broad and overdetermined a concept through which to grasp the present. Some media scholars, for example, have rejected visual studies, arguing that computers are fundamentally non‐optical technologies and that attention to the visual distracts us from the “real” sources of power, which are in the opaque, or even invisible realms of code, or in datasets so vast that they exceed human perception (see for example the work of Alexander Galloway and Friedrich Kittler). Given these critiques and important insights, we might well ask: why visual studies now? What is the urgency of a visual culture reader in the present moment?

      Moreover, while the rapid proliferation of new kinds of digital platforms and technologies in recent years has made the study of visual culture more challenging than ever, we believe that turning away from visual analysis reinforces the problematic idea that digital media are distinct from other forms of human cultural production. By contrast, we believe that these contemporary conditions underscore the continuing relevance of the questions that have always animated visual studies: What is the relationship between seeing and knowing? How do looking and visibility structure power relations? The chapters in this volume bear out the ongoing urgency of these questions. And while visual culture, particularly in the present moment, works both for and against us, we cannot retreat from visuality just because it makes us vulnerable. To paraphrase the words of Douglas Crimp, visual culture continues to offer a site of possibility for getting the culture that we deserve, as scholars and, more broadly, as cultural consumers. It is the playing field, and it is crucial that we understand how it operates, for good and for ill.

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      This book is organized as a series of non‐traditional keyword essays (Part II) preceded by an introductory Part I, which we call “Scenes from the Institutionalization of the Field.” The preliminary material in Part I offers a brief history of the formation of visual studies; and it does so through a series of essays, interviews, and personal reflections from key figures in its foundation, dissemination, and critique. These “scenes” present various accounts of the influences,